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ÿþ249 EVOLUTION OF CARBON-RICH PROTO-PLANETARY OBJECTS F. Herpin1, J.R. Goicoechea1, J.R. Pardo1,2, and J. Cernicharo1 1 Dept Física Molecular, I.E.M., C.S.I.C, Serrano 121, E-28006 Madrid, Spain 2 Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy, California Institute of Technology, MS 320-47, Pasadena, CA, 91125, USA Abstract here a comparative study of the far-IR (80-195 µm) emis- sion from 3 objects that represent different stages of this We compare ISO LWS observations of three C-rich fast transition (<" 103 yr): CRL 2688, a very young Proto- objects typical of each step of the fast transition of an Planetary Nebula (hereafter PPN), CRL 618 a PPN and AGB star to the Planetay Nebula stage: CRL 2688, a NGC 7027 a young PN. We also perform a study of the CO very young Proto-Planetary Nebula, CRL 618, a Proto- emission from the 3 objects that provides the necessary Planetary Nebula, and NGC 7027, a young Planetary Neb- kinematic information to precise their wind morphology. ula. Furthermore, we study the mm, submm, and IR CO CRL 2688 (the Egg Nebula) has an effective tempera- emission from CRL 2688. We underline the violent changes ture around 6600 K (Justtanont et al.1997). This object that occur in the chemical composition of these objects is evolving very fast towards the PN stage, and was still during their evolution due to the increasing UV radiation probably in the AGB phase about 100 years ago (Jura field and the strong shocks generated by fast stellar winds. & Kroto 1990). The central star is still relatively cool The importance of these mechanisms depends on the de- and thus has not yet photodissociated the molecular gas gree of evolution of the star. ejected during the AGB phase; no Photo-Dissociation Re- The circumstellar envelopes of evolved stars are impor- gion (hereafter PDR) has yet been formed. The molecular tant objects for the stellar evolution. As proved by ISO, gas is found to be in expanding, fragmented, shell struc- these objects are very good targets for the Herschel Space tures, and shocks are thought to heat it. Observatory (HSO, ex-FIRST). We present here what the CRL 618 must be a <" 200 years old PPN, i.e. the su- HSO will teach us about these objects. perwind phase terminated about 200 years ago. It has a compact HII region created by a hot central star (30 000 Key words: infrared: stars  line: identifications  plan- K, Justtanont et al.1997). CRL 618 is seen as a bipolar etary nebulae: individual (CRL2688, CRL618, NGC7027) nebula at all wavelengths. The expansion velocity of the  stars: abundances  stars: carbon  stars: evolution outer envelope is around 20 km s-1. However, CO observa- tions show the presence of a high-velocity outflow with ve- locities as high as 300 km s-1(Cernicharo et al. 1989). The high velocity wind and the UV photons from the star per- 1. Introduction turb the circumstellar envelope (CSE) producing shocks During the evolution of an Asymptotic Giant Branch (here- and a PDR (Herpin & Cernicharo 2000). after AGB) star to the Planetary Nebula (hereafter PN) The temperature of the central star of NGC 7027 is stage, extreme physical conditions take place. The circum- estimated to be more than 140 000 K (Liu et al.1996). stellar gas is exposed to very strong UV radiation fields This PN is very young though, having left the AGB only from the evolving central objects, and also undergoes vi- 103 years ago (Volk & Kwok 1997). Emission from the olent shocks generated by fast stellar winds colliding into inner envelope is dominated by continuum and line emis- the slower expanding AGB envelope. The importance of sion from the ionized nebula. A ionized region is revealed these mechanisms depends on the degree of evolution of by [OIII] fine-structure lines. The UV photons from the the object, as the strength of the UV field is related to central star produce a PDR and the gas cools mainly via the temperature of the central star and large shocks are ionic and fine-structure atomic lines. thought to disappear towards the end of this transition leading to the final PN stage. These fast and extreme 2. CO millimeter and submillimeter observations changes of the physical conditions considerably modify the chemical composition of these objects: O-bearing molecules The main goal of our millimeter and submillimeter CO can be formed in C-rich objects (Herpin & Cernicharo analysis is to get some insight into the onset and proper- 2000), as complex organic molecules (Cernicharo et al.2001 ties of fast winds in PPN objects. This bad-known process a and b). Moreover their morphology changes drastically is decisive for a well understanding of the post AGB evolu- during this evolution. In order to better understand this tion. PPN envelopes becoming highly asymmetric suggest evolution from an AGB star to the PN stage, we perform that shaping occurs before reaching the PN phase. This Proc. Symposium  The Promise of the Herschel Space Observatory 12 15 December 2000, Toledo, Spain ESA SP-460, July 2001, eds. G.L. Pilbratt, J. Cernicharo, A.M. Heras, T. Prusti, & R. Harris 250 F. Herpin et al. 20 km s-1. The High Velocity Wind is observed here with a velocity of <" 200 km s-1(280 km s-1for the deprojected velocity). This HVW is associated with a biconical out- flow. According to Cernicharo et al.(1989), the CO flow could be decelerated. In NGC 7027, the main emission has an expansion ve- locity of 15-20 km s-1. The line profiles show also some wings that could be the signature of a faster outflow, whose velocity is decreasing with increasing J (47 to 24 km s-1). We then think that the velocity of this Medium Velocity Wind may be around 45 km s-1. This flow may be the relic of a High Velocity Wind ejected during the PPN phase and not yet completely ionized or decelerated by contact with the low velocity envelope. 3. ISO LWS spectrum from the 3 objects We tried to model the ISO/LWS spectrum, using the kine- matic information derived from the individual CO lines presented before and also information available from other works. We used a simple LVG-model and obtained satis- factory fits (see Fig. 2). See Herpin et al.(2001) for details about the models. The abundances are given in Table 1. 4. Discussion 12 Figure 1. Spectra for the CO J=1-0, 2-1, 3-2, 6-5 and 7-6 The only far-IR line emissions present in the far-IR (12CO , 13 transitions for CRL 2688, CRL 618 and NGC 7027. The main CO , HCN) of CRL 2688 are well reproduced by our beam temperatures are in K and the velocity in km s-1. Base- shock model. The PPN exhibits a very fast wind (char- lines were applied. The 1-0 and 2-1 lines are IRAM 30m obser- acteristic of an object at the beggining of its transition vations; the others were made with the CSO and are smoothed. to the PN stage) which runs into the AGB remnant en- For each line, in the same caption, is shown in dashed line the velope. The gas then cools then via molecular lines. Con- high velocity emission with an expanded verticale scale (×10). 13 cerning the COemission, we must stress that at the res- olution of the grating spectrometra this emission is not detectable, and we can only derive a maximum value of may be due to the appearance of super winds interactions abundance (< 2.5 10-5/H2 , with[CO/H2]=6 10-4). The associated with final events of mass loss at the end of the 12 CO material is not yet reprocessed. We find that the asymptotic branch. Carbon monoxide emission in differ- HCN/CO abundance ratio may be lower in the fast wind ent low-excitation lines traces the circumstellar winds. We than in the slow wind (d" 6 10-6 and d" 2 10-5 respec- have complete observations of the CO low-excitation lines tively. Note that in the innermost regions of the C-rich J=1-0, 2-1 (IRAM 30-m) , 3-2, 6-5 and 7-6 (CSO, Hawaii) AGB circumstellar envelopes (e.g., IRC +10216) HCN is for the 3 objects (see Fig. 1). From these observations we the main coolant, while in the external parts CO and HCN have derived useful informations like the flow velocity for play this role. Furthermore, HNC is not detected here. each of the detected winds (see Herpin et al.2001). In CRL 618, Herpin & Cernicharo (2000) have shown For CRL 2688 we can distinguish two main flows. The that O-bearing species, H2O and OH, are produced in the main outflow velocity is around 20 km s-1, a value typi- innermost region of the circumstellar envelope. Also Cer- cal of AGB stars. The second flow is a moderate velocity nicharo et al.(2001a and b) have detected in this object the wind at a velocity of approximately 50 km s-1. Wing con- poli-acetylenic chains C4H2 and C6H2, methyl-polyynes, tribution is expected to be larger as J increases because and benzene. The gas cools via CO, C+ and [OI] lines. The emission will be thicker (line emission is proportional to UV photons from the central star photodissociate most of the opacity in the thin case). Several high-J CO lines were the molecular species produced in the AGB phase and observed in Fabry-Perot mode with the LWS (see Herpin allow a chemistry dominated by standard ion-neutral re- et al.2001), and these winds are also seen in these obser- actions. Not only allow these reactions the formation of vations. O-bearing species, but they also modify the abundances Two outflows can be seen in the CO line profiles from of C-rich molecules like HCN and HNC for which we found CRL 618. A main outflow has expansion velocity of roughly an abundance ratio of 1, much lower than in AGB stars. Evolution of Carbon-Rich Proto-Planetary Objects 251 Figure 2. Continuum subtracted ISO LWS spectra of CRL 2688 (bottom caption), CRL 618 (middle caption) and NGC 7027 12 13 (top caption). The result of our models is shown by the continuous red line. The lines of CO , CO , HCN, H2O, CH+ and OH are indicated by arrows while those of HNC in CRL 618 are indicated by vertical lines (from J=22-21 at 150.627 µmto J=17-16 at 194.759 µm). The C+ and [OIII] transitions are not included in our models; the plots indicate gaussian fits to these features. We derived a [12CO /13CO ] ratio of 20. The HCN abun- the amount of OH. Concerning HCN, Deguchi et al.(1990) dance goes from 10-3 close to the torus to 10-1 in the derived a HCN to CO ratio of 9 10-5 that explains why we lobes due to the efficient dissociation in the second re- do not detect line emission from this molecule. As a con- 12 gion. The abundances of H2O and OH relative to CO are sequence, observed CO in these objects are newly formed 4 10-2 and 8 10-4 respectively. molecules rather than remnants from the AGB circum- stellar enveloppe. The detected molecules are constantly NGC 7027 has a very hot central star. Because of the formed as well as destroyed in NGC 7027 (Hasegawa et resulting important UV flux, there is a strong presence al.2000). of atomic lines. UV photons from the central star pro- duce a PDR and the gas cools mainly via fine-structure atomic lines. Species like CH+, CH, [OIII], [NII], OH are 5. Evolution scheme detected, but no H2O . In the PDR, most of the CO molecules having been photodissociated (Liu et al.1996). The study of our 3 objects sample shows well the impor- Due to the high temperatures, densities and UV radia- tance of the winds and the increasing importance of the tion field in the PDR, the formation of CH+ leads to the UV flux during the evolution of an AGB star to the PN creation of CH+ and CH+, whose dissociative recombi- stage. This is clearly indicated by the atomic and ionic 2 3 nation will form CH very efficiently at high temperature lines appearing in CRL 618 and present in the spectra of (Sternberg & Dalgarno 1995). Moreover, the only pres- NGC 7027. On the other hand, the shocks are less im- ence of [OI] and CH+ in the hottest shells of the atomic portant as the evolution goes on, as the wind velocity is region, and the low abundance of CO in the adjacent decreasing. The strongest shocks occur just after leaving shells indicate that the CO molecules have been largely the AGB when the central star is ejecting large amounts reprocessed there through UV photons. The non detec- of material in a very fast wind (the case of CRL 2688). tion of H2O and the detection of OH indicate that the The AGB remnant envelope is progressively ejected to H2O molecules formed in the previous stage may have the very outer parts of the object, being shocked by the been also reprocessed due to the strong UV field. UV ra- strong wind from the star. As the object is C-rich, these 12 13 diation can transform H2OintoOHandH, andsoincrease shock-conditions further the CO , CO and HCN emis- 252 13 sions. The CO abundance remains quite stable accord- its isotopes will be possible) and CO with a high velocity ing to the AGB phase. The fast increase of the stellar resolution will allow the study of the circumstellar en- 12 temperature, when the object evolves, will produce a new velopes at intermediate temperatures (the CO J=6-5 to chemistry, a UV-based chemistry in fact. These new con- J=17-16 lines will be observable, filling the gap between ditions (UV associated with shocks) will deeply modify mm and ISO observations, thus providing informations the constitution of the inner parts of the envelope. In- about intermediate regions). New molecular emissions will deed, in CRL 618 O-bearing molecules appear (H2Oand be discovered, and fine-structure lines will be observed, OH), as complex organic molecules. Furthermore, CO will as low-lying ro-vibrational transitions of complex species be reprocessed. HCN molecules will also be reprocessed, such as PAHs, or long carbon chains (more than 15 atoms, leading to strong HNC emission close to the PDR (same bending modes). We can expect with these new observa- abundance of HCN and HNC). At this point, CO lines and tions to distinguish between chemical models. [OI] atomic lines are the dominant coolants. As the star HIFI will allow very high resolution spectroscopy ob- reaches the PN stage, the mass ejection is quite finished, servations between 157-212 µm and 240-625 µm. A sensi- the strong fast winds have disappeared, and slow expand- tivity 100 to 1000 times better than ISO will be reachable ing shells constitute the PN envelope around a large and (10-18 Wm-2 in line observations with 5 Ã in 1 hour). hot atomic region. All the old AGB material has been Thus thousands of molecular, atomic and ionic lines will reprocessed: the CO and other molecules are constantly be observable with this high resolution, providing more produced and destroyed. The spectra is now dominated accurate abundances. With a complete line survey, more by atomic and ionic lines. New species such as CH+ and accurate constraints on the physical parameters, the dy- CH appear. There is only weak HCN, or HNC emission. namical processes will be derived. H2O has probably also been reprocessed and is only an Acknowledgements intermediate molecule of the PPN stage. We thank spanish DGES and CICYT for funding support for this research under grants PB96-0883 and ESP98-1351E. Table 1. Table of the molecular, atomic and ionic abundances 12 (relative to CO ) in CRL 2688, CRL 618 and NGC 7027 as References seen by the model. Cernicharo J., Guélin M., Martín-Pintado J., Peñalver J., Species CRL 2688 CRL 618 NGC7027 Mauersberger R., 1989, A&A 222, L1 13 CO < 1/25 1/20 < 1/30 Cernicharo J., Heras A.M., Tielens A.G.G.M., et al., 2001a, HCN < 1/30 - 1/100 1/10 - 1/1000 ApJL in press HNC 1/10 - 1/1000 Cernicharo J., Heras A.M., Pardo J.R., et al., 2001b, ApJL in H2O 1/25 < 1/650 press OH 1/1250 1/20 Deguchi S., Izumiura H., Kaifu N., Mao X., Nguyen-Q-Rieu, [OI] 4.5 875 Ukita N., 1990, ApJ 351, 522 CH+ 1/80 Hasegawa T., Volk K., Kwok S., 2000, ApJ 532, 994 Herpin F., Cernicharo J., 2000, ApJ 530, L129 Herpin F. et al., 2001, in preparation Jura M., Kroto H., 1990, ApJ 351,222 Justtanont K., Tielens A.G.G.M., Skinner C.J., Haas M.R., 6. Herschel Space Observatory 1997, ApJ 476. 319 Liu X.W., Barlow M.J., Nguyen-Q-Rieu, et al., 1996, A&A 315, As these evolved objects are very important for the in- L257 terstellar medium, due to their interaction (mass loss. . . ), Sternberg A., Dalgarno A., 1995, ApJS 99, 565 as they are unique laboratories, the AGB, PPNs and PNs Volk K., Kwok S., 1997, ApJ 477, 722 are very interesting targets for the HSO. The HSO (mainly HIFI) will allow the study of the in- ner layers where dust and wind formation occur, to trace shocks, to study the intern photodissociation (PDR, physi- cal and chemical conditions), and more especially the mass loss history (via imaging of the continuum emission to de- tect compact detached shells and the changes in the mass loss rate, the morphological changes). HIFI will provide in- formations about the velocity structure of the envelopes. Black-bodies with temperatures between 10 K and 50 K peak in this wavelength range. Gases with temperatures between 10 K and a few hundred K emit their brightest molecular and atomic emission lines here. The observation of new transitions of H2O (a complete study of H2Oand

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