Bibcode
Garcia-Lario, P.; Manchado, A.; Pych, W.; Pottasch, S. R.
Bibliographical reference
A & A Supplement series, Vol. 126, December II 1997, 479-502.
Advertised on:
12
1997
Citations
166
Refereed citations
145
Description
We present the near infrared photometry of a new sample of 225 IRAS
sources, many of them previously unidentified in the literature,
selected because their far infrared colours are similar to those shown
by known planetary nebulae. The results obtained are used to establish
the main source of near infrared emission. Combining this information
with the far infrared IRAS data and a few additional criteria we
determine the nature and evolutionary stage of all the sources observed
so far, including those for which near infrared photometry was
previously reported in Papers I and II. Among the unidentified IRAS
sources in our sample we find only a small percentage of planetary
nebulae, many of them very young and dusty, showing peculiar near
infrared colours. Most of the new objects observed in the near infrared
are identified as transition objects in the previous stages of the
stellar evolution. Among them, we find heavily obscured late-AGB stars,
early post-AGB stars still obscured by thick circumstellar envelopes
which are probably the true progenitors of planetary nebulae, and a
significant fraction of stars with bright optical counterparts showing
little or no near infrared excess, which we associate with highly
evolved post-AGB stars with low mass progenitors, which may never become
planetary nebulae. In addition, we also find a small percentage of young
stellar objects, as well as a few Seyfert galaxies. We conclude that, in
most cases, based on near infrared data alone, it is not possible to
give a confident classification of the unidentified IRAS source.
However, the near infrared is shown to be a powerful tool, specially
when dealing with objects which are heavily obscured in the optical. In
this case, the detection of the near infrared counterpart is the only
way in which we can extend the study of these sources to other spectral
ranges and may be crucial to understand the short-lived phase which
precedes the formation of a new planetary nebula. Based on observations
collected at the European Southern Observatory, La Silla (Chile) and at
the Spanish Observatorio del Teide, Tenerife, Spain. Table 6 is only
available electronically at the CDS via anonymous ftp to
cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or via
http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/Abstract.html