Bibcode
DOI
García-Lario, Pedro; Manchado, A.; Ulla, Ana; Manteiga, Minia
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 513, Issue 2, pp. 941-946.
Advertised on:
3
1999
Journal
Citations
50
Refereed citations
45
Description
Based on ISO short-wavelength spectrograph (SWS)+long-wavelength
spectrograph (LWS) observations, IRAS 16594-4656 is identified as a new
member of the rare class of C-rich proto-planetary nebulae with the 21
μm dust feature in emission. In addition, the major polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission bands at 3.3, 6.2, 7.7, 8.6, and
11.3 μm are detected, together with unusually strong features at 12.6
and 13.4 mum, very rarely observed, attributed to PAH species with a
high degree of hydrogenation. The shapes and relative intensities of the
various features found are consistent with a mixed population of
transient decomposition products of large hydrogenated amorphous
carbonaceous (HAC) grains, consisting of fullerenes with different
degrees of hydrogenation, which we suggest to be the main carriers of
the strong 21 μm feature, and a combination of small and large
partially dehydrogenated cationic PAH molecules excited by the visible
radiation coming from the central star. Additional features
corresponding to crystalline silicates (mostly pyroxenes) are also
tentatively detected, together with a possible very broad unidentified
emission feature centered around 30 mum, previously reported as
appearing in combination with the 21 μm feature in other
proto-planetary nebulae candidates. The combination of features
corresponding to O-rich and C-rich dust grains, if real, would suggest a
recent change to a C-rich chemistry in the outer envelope of IRAS
16594-4656. With the help of optical ground-based spectroscopy and
recently obtained Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images, we identify IRAS
16594-4656 as a new transition object between the asymptotic giant
branch (post-AGB) and the planetary nebula (PN) stage. The ground-based
optical spectrum shows only the Balmer lines in emission and a faint,
probably shock-excited, [O I] emission over a very red continuum where
strong, probably circumstellar, diffuse interstellar absorption bands
(DIBs) at 5780 and 6281-6284 Å are clearly seen. HST WFPC2
continuum images reveal the presence of a bright central star surrounded
by a bipolar reflection nebula with a multiple-axis morphology and a
maximum size of ~5^''x11^''.