Bibcode
Jones, D.
Bibliographical reference
Journal of Physics: Conference Series, Volume 728, Issue 3, article id. 032014 (2016).
Advertised on:
7
2016
Citations
5
Refereed citations
5
Description
Close binary central stars of planetary nebulae are key in constraining
the poorly- understood common-envelope phase of evolution, which in turn
is critical in understanding the formation of a wide-range of
astrophysical phenomena (including cataclysmic variables, low-mass X-ray
binaries and supernovae type Ia). Here, I present the results of our
on-going, targeted search for close-binaries in planetary nebulae which
has led to the discovery of more than ten new central binaries in just
the last few years (almost the same as the total discovered during the
1980s and 1990s together). This success has been rooted in the targeted
selection of objects for study, based on morphological features deemed
typical of binarity, as well as novel observing strategies (including
the employment of narrow-band filters for photometry to minimise nebular
contamination), both of which are discussed. These new discoveries
coupled with the painstaking characterisation of both newly discovered
systems and those from the literature mean that we are now in a position
to begin to probe the poorly understood common-envelope phase.