The temperature of central stars of planetary nebulae is an essential parameter for studying the star evolution, in particular through the HR diagram. Hphotometry of NGC 6543 planetary nebula is obtained in order to determine the Zanstra temperature of its central star. Under the assumptions that the star radiates approximately as a blackbody, and that the nebula is optically thick for the ionizing radiation, the ratio of the integrated narrow band H
flux for the star and the nebula provides a temperature estimate. In the present study, the complex structure of the core of the nebula is not resolved and only a lower temperature limit of its central star (T
19000K) is possible to obtain. The errors and the observational limitations are carefully examined.
NGC 6543 is a large planetary nebula with a strikingly complex,
symmetric envelope, and a bright, visible central star. Its
favourable position, almost at the north pole of the ecliptic, have
made it an obvious candidate for a target to be observed with the
10-inch Great Ohio Telescope (GOT). The present study of this PN
involves the Zanstra method (Zanstra, 1931) of determinig the
effective temperature of the central star. Providing that the star
radiates approximatelly as blackbodies, and that the nebula is
optically thick, this method can be applied if two quantities are
known: first, the flux of the stellar continuum; secondly, the amount
of ionizing photons (lambda > 912 Å), as deduced from the total
nebular flux at H
.
For the nucleus of NGC 6543, the Zanstra method
determined temperatures from 39,000 K (Pottasch et al. 1978) to
43,000 K (Castor et al. 1981) while theoretical expectations based on
evolutionary calculations (Vanbeveren, 1980) predict a temperature of
the order of
90,000 K. Bianchi et al. (1986) fit the observed
flux by a Planck function with a temperature
80,000 K, while recent
spectophotometry carried out by Hyung et al. (2000) suggests a value
of around 50,000 K. Clearly the accuracy of this method depends on how
well the model (black body approximation) represents reality. Also, if
the nebula is not completely optically thick to the Lyman photons,
then only a lower limit for T can be estimated.
The purpose of this work is to consider the chalenge of the observational
determination of the Zanstra temperature of the Cat's Eye in the
context of the theoretical and instrumental dificulties imposed by the
method itself and the technical performances of the telescope.
images of planetary nebula NGC 6543 (PK96 + 29°1, VV143,
=
17h58m33s.4,
= +66°37'59",
[J2000.0]) were obtained with the SBIG ST-8 CCD camera of the 0.25 meter
Great Ohio Telescope on April 27, 2001. With a diameter of
19.5", the
nebula fits comfortably into the 17'.5 x 12'.8 field of view of the
CCD detector. Data reported here were obtained under seeing
conditions typically of
5". The weather was generally photometric. The CCD
pixel size of 9x9
m projects to 0.7" on the sky. The peak of the H
filter (central wavelength = 6563 Å, bandpass (FWHM)
40 Å) is
characterized by a relative quantum efficiency of the chip (Kodak
KAF-1600 non-ABG) of 40%.
Multiple exposures (2 x 600s and 1 x 300s) totaling 1500s were
obtained, yielding a signal-to-noise ratio of
170(90) per pixel, at the
center of the nebula (at the outskirts of the nebula,
respectively). The CCD pixels were not saturated. Observations were
performed at an airmass of about 1.12. Multiple dark frames
corresponding to each exposure time were acquired during the
observation night. Dawn and twilight sky frames were obtained with
60s exposure each; both sets of flats give a good signal, and they are
all used in the reduction procces. A number of 11 'Zero-length'
(0.11s) exposures, or 'bias-frames', were obtained the very next day;
in order to account for a possible temperature dependence of the
intrinsic bias pattern of the CCD, the detector was cooled down at
-15°C, the temperature at which all data were observed in the
previous night.
The H
emission is usually contaminated by the [NII]
6548, 6583
doublet, characterized by a 3:1 line intensity ratio, as given by the
corresponding Einstein A coefficients. Our narrow H
filter
includes only marginaly this emission, corresponding to a transmission
coefficient
30%. Specifically for NGC 6543 nebula, the ratio of
integrated [NII] and H
line fluxes ([NII]/H
) is 0.13 for the rings and 0.16 in the
core. The effect of contamination is therefore much less than 5%, and
is ignored in this paper.
2.8
electrons/ADU, and the read noise
11.5 electrons(per pixel). In order to
minimize the number of subtractions (i.e., to avoid adding extra
readnoise), the darks corresponding to the same exposure time are
combined and used to dark-correct the object frames before any bias
subtraction. For the dark-correction of the flats, the bias level
obtained by combining all 11 zero frames is subtracted from all darks
and flats, and a single combined dark frame using all the dark
exposures is constructed. The corrected flats are flatcombined
into a single data file, which is used to flat-correct the object
frames. The cosmic ray cleaning is performed with xzap (in
dimsum package) by choosing a boz size = 6 for zapping, and a
number of sky sigma = 6 for the threshold. The final image of the
nebula is obtained by xregistering the individual frames and
coadding them using imexpression. The sky level is determined
by computing a median value of the average counts computed (using
imstat) for several boxes of sky in the coadded image. The sky
subtracted image is presented in Figure 1a, in different color
representations.
Figure
1.a |
Figure 1.b |
image of planetary nebula NGC 6543
displayed in grey, 'heat', and 'color' (from left to right). The
contrast has been adjusted nonlinearly in order to show both bright
and faint features. Linear size scale is based on the distance
determination presented in Hyung et al. (2000). b) H
image of
the Cat's Eye (Balick 1987), obtained at the 2.1 m telescope of Kitt
Peak National Observatory (KPNO), is shown for comparison. (scale =
37".5 / 0.20 pc / 53.5 pixels; North is up, East is to the left)
Correction for extinction and absolute flux calibration are not necessary as only flux ratios in the same band-pass are used, and it is assumed that the extinction does not occur in the nebula itself. Special care is taken with the calculation of realistic uncertainties in the flux measurements. An 'error' image, created by combining quadratically the readnoise and the object-frame noise, is used to derive the total uncertainty associated with the stellar and nebular flux.
It is clear from the presented images that the central star is
seriously affected by the nebula and it cannnot be measured. The
highly symmetric shape of NGC 6543 is preserved, but the complex,
peculiar structure consisting of two pairs of bipolar lobes along
different axes, which is present in the Balick (1987) H
picture, is
barely noticeable in the GOT image. Its amorphous look is mostly due
to the poor seeing conditions, which do not allow to distinguish
features smaller than
5" (or 7 pixels). This factor should be considered
if future observations of this type are undertaken.
The radial profile of the nebula (Figure 2., upper left panel)
does show some inner structure but nothing resembling the point spread
function of a star. Although the star itself cannot be identified and
measured, an upper limit of its emitting flux can be estimated by
artificially creating/adding a star in the center of the
nebula. Consequently, a lower limit of its temperature can be obtained
using the Zanstra method.
In order to preserve the authenticity of the observed data, one of the
two observed stars available in the field is 'pasted' into the spatial
origin of the nebula: a rectangular box including (most of) the star
is copied into a zero-count image in the place corresponding to the
center of the nebula; this image is then added to the object frame.
The process is repeated for different 'star' magnitudes. The radial
profiles of the artificially created systems consisting of the nebula
and the added 'central' star of different brightness are displayed in
Figure 2. The cusp that creates at the center with increasing 'star'
counts argues for a confident identification of its presence only when
a 20 times brighter (in flux) than the original star is added.
Among other methods for determining the effective temperature of
the central star, the Zanstra method has the advantage that the
number of ionizing photons from the star can be counted simply by
measuring the nebular flux in a single hydrogen recombination line
(e.g. H
). With L
f being the luminosity of the star at a particular
frequency (H
), and the flux from the star approximately
represented by the Planck function B
(T):
The total number of ionizing photons emitted by the star is
If the absorption of ionizing quanta is considered complete, the
total number of ionizations should balance the number of recaptures
per unit time (case B recombination), and thus, the luminosity from
the entire nebula in a particular emission line (H
) can be expressed as:
where
B
and
effH
are the recombination coefficients, with
(e.g. Seaton, 1959).
Therefore, the first equation, rewriten in terms of H
fluxes measured from the
nebula and the star (with h
0 = 13.6 eV) is:
and the measurements thus determine the temperature T of the
ionizing star. The right hand side of this equation is ploted as a
function of temperature in Figure 3. Three previously published values
of the temperature of the central star and the corresponding flux
ratios are indicated. The temperature limit given by the flux ratio
corresponding to the case where the artificially added star is 20
times amplified is
19000K (fstar/fnebula = 0.165
± 0.01). If the H
flux ratio is uncertain by a factor of 2, i.e. the
uncertainty interval of identifying an artificial star at the center
of the nebula, the temperature is still accurate to within 25%.
| Figure 3. Plot of the H flux ratio (star/nebula) as a function of
temperature. The calculated flux ratios corresponding to different
results of the simulation are recorded. Published values of the
temperature of the central star are also indicated. A log-log version
of this plot can be found here. |
Despite the problems with determining accurate stellar temperatures, the present data can be definitely used to advance the state of our knowledge of planetary nebulae and the relationship with their nuclei. Similar studies of planetary nebulae, and especially photometry of their central stars should be interesting to perform with this kind of equipment, particularly for objects in which the proximity of the bright inner rims to the central PN nucleus is comparable with the available resolution element.