A carbon-rich hot bubble in the planetary nebula NGC 5189
Abstract
We present the discovery of extended X-ray emission from the planetary nebula (PN) NGC 5189 around the [WO1]-type WD 1330-657 with XMM-Newton. The X-ray-emitting gas fills the cavities detected in the Hubble Space Telescope [O III] narrow-band image and presents a limb-brightened morphology towards the outer edges of the east and west lobes. The bulk of the X-ray emission is detected in the soft (0.3 - 0.7 keV) band with the XMM-Newton EPIC spectra dominated by the C VI Lyα line at 0.37 keV (=33.7 ). Spectral analysis resulted in carbon and neon abundances 38 and 6 times their solar values, with a plasma temperature of kT=0.140.01 keV (T=1.6×106 K) and X-ray luminosity of LX=(2.80.8)×1032 erg s-1. NGC 5189 is an evolved and extended PN (0.70 pc in radius), thus, we suggest that the origin of its X-ray emission is consistent with the born-again scenario in which the central star becomes carbon-rich through an eruptive very late thermal pulse, subsequently developing a fast, carbon-rich wind powering the X-ray emission as suggested for A30 and A78.
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