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We investigate the possible progenitors of the planetary nebulae (PNs) which populate the top 0.5 mag of the [O III] 5007 planetary nebula luminosity function (PNLF). We show that the absolute luminosity of the PNLF cutoff demands that the central stars of these most luminous planetaries be greater than 0.6 Msun, and that such high-mass PN cores must exist in every galaxy. We also use the bolometric-luminosity specific PN number density to show that in early-type galaxies, [O III]-bright planetaries are relatively rare, with only about 10% of stars evolving to these bright magnitudes. We demonstrate that the combination of these two facts implies that either all early-type systems contain a small, smoothly distributed component of young (< 1 Gyr old) stars, or another mechanism exists for creating high-core mass planetaries. We argue that binary-star evolution is this second mechanism, and demonstrate that blue stragglers have the appropriate core properties and number density to explain the observations. We discuss the implications of this alternative mode of stellar evolution, and speculate on how coalesced binaries might affect the use of PNs for measuring a galaxys star-formation history and chemical evolution.
It is widely believed that central star binarity plays an important role in the formation and evolution of aspherical planetary nebulae, however observational support for this hypothesis is lacking. Here, we present the most recent results of a conti
Observations suggest that many, if not all, post AGB systems evolve through an aspherical outflow phase. Such outflows require a sufficient engine rotational energy which binaries can provide. Via common envelope evolution, binaries can directly ejec
I review the progress in research on Intracluster Planetary Nebulae (IPN). Hundreds of IPN candidates have now been found in the Virgo and Fornax galaxy clusters, and searches of two nearby galaxy groups have made. From the results thus far, approxim
During the last years, many observational studies have revealed that binaries play an active role in the shaping of non spherical planetary nebulae. We review the different works that lead to the direct or indirect evidence for the presence of binary
Planetary Nebulae (PNe) are amongst the most spectacular objects produced by stellar evolution, but the exact identity of their progenitors has never been established for a large and homogeneous observational sample. We investigate the relationship b