Massive expanding torus and fast outflow in planetary nebula NGC 6302
Abstract
We present interferometric observations of 12CO and 13CO J=2-1 emission from the butterfly-shaped, young planetary nebula NGC 6302. The high angular resolution and high sensitivity achieved in our observations allow us to resolve the nebula into two distinct kinematic components: (1) a massive expanding torus seen almost edge-on and oriented in the North-South direction, roughly perpendicular to the optical nebula axis. The torus exhibits very complex and fragmentated structure; (2) high velocity molecular knots moving at high velocity, higher than 20 , and located in the optical bipolar lobes. These knots show a linear position-velocity gradient (Hubble-like flow), which is characteristic of fast molecular outflow in young planetary nebulae. From the low but variable 12CO/13CO J=2-1 line intensity ratio we conclude that the 12CO J=2-1 emission is optically thick over much of the nebula. Using the optically thinner line 13CO J=2-1 we estimate a total molecular gas mass of 0.1 M, comparable to the ionized gas mass; the total gas mass of the NGC 6302 nebula, including the massive ionized gas from photon dominated region, is found to be 0.5 M. From radiative transfer modelling we infer that the torus is seen at inclination angle of 75 with respect to the plane of the sky and expanding at velocity of 15 . Comparison with recent observations of molecular gas in NGC 6302 is also discussed.
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