High-speed photometry of, and speculations on, the central star of M 1-2.
Abstract
Photometric observations of the planetary nebula Minkowski 1-2, the central star of which is believed to be an eclipsing binary, are presented. High-speed photometry with a time resolution of 5 sec was obtained for 10 hours over a two-night period with the No. 2 0.9-m reflector at Kitt Peak National Observatory in the standard B filter. Results show no eclipses or other evidence of variability although it was observed continuously for time periods longer than the 4.0002-hour period proposed by Drummond (1980). The findings support the view that the central star of M 1-2 must be either a wide binary or a very unusual single star. A wide-binary model of the system is then suggested which consists of a hot subdwarf and a G-type giant with peculiar abundances surrounded by nebular debris, possibly representing the stage immediately following large-scale mass transfer in the formation of a barium star.
- Publication:
-
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
- Pub Date:
- October 1981
- DOI:
- 10.1086/130899
- Bibcode:
- 1981PASP...93..630G
- Keywords:
-
- Binary Stars;
- Planetary Nebulae;
- Stellar Spectrophotometry;
- Abundance;
- Barium;
- G Stars;
- Hot Stars;
- Light Curve;
- Periodic Variations;
- Stellar Mass Accretion;
- Stellar Mass Ejection;
- Subdwarf Stars;
- Supergiant Stars;
- Temporal Resolution;
- Astronomy