Discovery of multiple dust shells beyond 1 arcmin in the circumstellar envelope of IRC +10216 using Herschel/PACS
Blommaert, J. A. D. L.; Barlow, M. J.; Ottensamer, R.; Decin, L.; Vandenbussche, B.; Lim, T.; Groenewegen, M. A. T.; Waelkens, C.; Royer, P.; Kerschbaum, F.; Cox, N. L. J.; Posch, T.
Belgium, Netherlands, Austria, United Kingdom
Abstract
We present new Herschel/PACS images at 70, 100, and 160 μm of the well-known, nearby, carbon-rich asymptotic giant branch star IRC+10216 revealing multiple dust shells in its circumstellar envelope. For the first time, dust shells (or arcs) are detected until 320''. The almost spherical shells are non-concentric and have an angular extent between ~40° and ~200°. The shells have a typical width of 5''-8'', and the shell separation varies in the range of ~10''-35'', corresponding to ~500 -1 700 yr. Local density variations within one arc are visible. The shell/intershell density contrast is typically ~4, and the arcs contain some 50% more dust mass than the smooth envelope. The observed (nested) arcs record the mass-loss history over the past 16 000 yr, but Rayleigh-Taylor and Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities in the turbulent astropause and astrosheath will erase any signature of the mass-loss history for at least the first 200 000 yr of mass loss. Accounting for the bowshock structure, the envelope mass around IRC+10216 contains >2 M⊙ of gas and dust mass. It is argued that the origin of the shells is related to non-isotropic mass-loss events and clumpy dust formation.
Herschel is an ESA space observatory with science instruments provided by European-led Principal Investigator consortia and with important participation from NASA.