neufer wrote:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetary_nebula#Physical_characteristics wrote:
<<Bipolar nebulae are concentrated in the galactic plane, likely produced by relatively young massive progenitor stars; and bipolars in the galactic bulge appear to prefer orienting their orbital axes parallel to the galactic plane. On the other hand, spherical nebulae are likely produced by the old stars similar to the Sun.
T. Rector (U. Alaska Anchorage), H. Schweiker (WIYN), NOAO, AURA, NSF
I still believe that most (at least relatively bright and obvious) planetaries in the sky have been produced by stars that were originally (considerably, or much) more massive than the Sun.Constellation Guide compared the Ring Nebula with the planetary nebula that will be produced by the Sun:
The Sun will have a similar fate in about 5-6 billion years, but as it is less massive than the Ring Nebula’s progenitor star, once it becomes a white dwarf it will heat more slowly and the planetary nebula that will form once the Sun has ejected its outer layers will be much fainter because by the time the central white dwarf is hot enough to illuminate the nebula, the ejected material will be further away.
Ann