2004MNRAS.353.1251L


Query : 2004MNRAS.353.1251L

2004MNRAS.353.1251L - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 353, 1251-1285 (2004/October-1)

Chemical abundances of planetary nebulae from optical recombination lines - II. Abundances derived from collisionally excited lines and optical recombination lines.

LIU Y., LIU X.-W., BARLOW M.J. and LUO S.-G.

Abstract (from CDS):

In Paper I, we presented spectrophotometric measurements of emission lines from the ultraviolet (UV) to the far-infrared for 12 Galactic planetary nebulae (PNe) and derived nebular thermal and density structures using a variety of plasma diagnostics. The measurements and plasma diagnostic results are used in the current paper to determine elemental abundances in these nebulae. Abundance analyses are carried out using both strong collisionally excited lines (CELs) and weak optical recombination lines (ORLs) from heavy element ions.

Assuming electron temperatures and densities derived from HI recombination spectra (line and continuum), we are able to determine the ORL C abundance relative to hydrogen for all the PNe in our sample, N and O abundances for 11 of them and Ne abundances for nine of them. In all cases, ORL abundances are found to be systematically higher than the corresponding values deduced from CELs. In NGC 40, the discrepancy between the abundances derived from the two types of emission line reaches a factor of 17 for oxygen. For the other 10 PNe, the discrepancies for oxygen vary from 1.6 to 3.1. In general, collisionally excited infrared fine-structure lines, which have excitation energies less than 103 K and consequently emissivities that are insensitive to electron temperature and temperature fluctuations, yield ionic abundances comparable to those derived from optical/UV CELs. For a given nebula, the discrepancies between the ORL and CEL abundances are of similar magnitude for different elements. In other words, relative abundance ratios such as C/O, N/O and Ne/O deduced from the traditional method based on strong CELs are comparable to those yielded by ORLs, for a wide range of ORL to CEL oxygen abundance ratios, varying from near unity to over a factor of 20.

We have also determined ORL abundances relative to hydrogen for the third-row element magnesium for 11 nebulae in our sample. In strong contrast to the cases for second-row elements, Mg abundances derived from the MgII 3d-4f λ4481 ORL are nearly constant for all the PNe analysed so far and agree within the uncertainties with the solar photospheric value.

In accordance with results from previous studies, the ORL to CEL abundance ratio is correlated with the difference between the electron temperatures derived from the [OIII] forbidden-line ratio, on the one hand, and from the hydrogen recombination Balmer discontinuity, on the other. We find that the discrepancy between the ORL and CEL abundances is correlated with nebular absolute diameter, surface brightness, the electron density derived from [Sii] CELs, and excitation class. The results confirm that the dichotomy of temperatures and heavy elemental abundances determined from the two types of emission line, which has been widely observed in PNe, is a strong function of nebular evolution, as first pointed out by Garnett and Dinerstein.

Our analyses show that temperature fluctuations and/or density inhomogeneities are incapable of explaining the large discrepancies between the heavy elemental abundances and electron temperatures determined from the two types of emission line. Our analyses support the bi-abundance model of Liu et al., who have proposed that PNe contain another previously unseen component of ionized gas which, highly enriched in heavy elements, has an electron temperature of ≲103 K and emits strongly in recombination lines but not in CELs. Our determinations of low average emission temperatures from the observed line intensity ratios of HeI and OII ORLs lend further support to this scenario.


Abstract Copyright: 2004 RAS

Journal keyword(s): ISM: abundances - planetary nebulae: general

CDS comments: In page 1271: LMC N66 = IRAS 05363-6720, In page 1283 Abell 30 and 78 = PN A66 30 and 78.

Simbad objects: 36

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Number of rows : 36
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 40 PN 00 13 01.0170097248 +72 31 19.033338720   11.63 11.46     [WC8] 617 2
2 M 42 HII 05 35 17 -05 23.4           ~ 4081 0
3 SMP LMC 83 PN 05 36 20.7215081304 -67 18 07.658262756 15.56 16.225 14.948   16.558 [WN4.5:] 145 0
4 NAME Ori A MoC 05 38 -07.1           ~ 3014 0
5 NGC 2022 PN 05 42 06.1904253312 +09 05 10.585995576   14.9 14.2     [WC] 362 0
6 PN A66 30 PN 08 46 53.4639874872 +17 52 46.369394580   14.23 14.30 13.47   [WC5] 412 0
7 NGC 3132 PN 10 07 01.7656422504 -40 26 11.130553032   10.14 10.01     A2V 394 1
8 NGC 3242 PN 10 24 46.1335521792 -18 38 32.296857792   11.83 12.15     ~ 819 1
9 NGC 3576 HII 11 11 49.8 -61 18 14           ~ 237 2
10 NGC 3918 PN 11 50 17.7709504944 -57 10 57.017302428   10.0 8.5     ~ 381 0
11 NGC 4361 PN 12 24 30.7510527528 -18 47 05.567336304   12.8 13.2     [WC] 394 1
12 IC 3568 PN 12 33 06.8549162136 +82 33 50.202643608   11.809 10.730 12.651   ~ 399 0
13 NGC 5307 PN 13 51 03.2580878376 -51 12 20.835744984   11.5 10     O3.5V 176 0
14 NGC 5315 PN 13 53 56.9726795664 -66 30 50.859483264   14.58 14.40     [WO4] 309 0
15 NGC 5882 PN 15 16 49.9562553264 -45 38 58.616280132   11.9 10.9     ~ 274 0
16 NGC 6153 PN 16 31 30.5708444544 -40 15 12.646208700   10.7 15.55     ~ 303 0
17 NGC 6210 PN 16 44 29.5191019368 +23 47 59.421958296   12.3 11.7     Of/[WR] 587 0
18 NGC 6543 PN 17 58 33.4039587288 +66 37 58.750734000   11.09 11.28     [WC] 1170 1
19 PN M 2-24 PN 18 02 02.8945854456 -34 27 47.275175592   15.62 14.60 15.29   ~ 97 0
20 PN M 1-42 PN 18 11 04.99 -28 58 59.1   13.1 14.00     ~ 207 0
21 NGC 6572 PN 18 12 06.3181909152 +06 51 13.027935240   9.3 10.8     [WC] 753 0
22 PN M 2-36 PN 18 17 41.43 -29 08 19.9         17.012 ~ 133 0
23 NGC 6618 OpC 18 20 47 -16 10.3           ~ 1615 0
24 PN Hf 2-2 PN 18 32 30.9015918072 -28 43 20.276106312     15.90     ~ 96 0
25 NGC 6644 PN 18 32 34.70280 -25 07 44.1588           ~ 193 0
26 M 57 PN 18 53 35.0967659112 +33 01 44.883287544   15.405 15.769 15.901 16.062 DA(O?) 832 2
27 NGC 6741 PN 19 02 37.10 -00 26 56.7     9.6     ~ 346 0
28 NGC 6781 PN 19 18 28.085 +06 32 19.29     11.8     ~ 262 0
29 NGC 6790 PN 19 22 56.972976 +01 30 46.40112   12.247 10.504 12.684   wels 322 0
30 NGC 6826 PN 19 44 48.1500225888 +50 31 30.249034932   9.779 9.359 10.775   O3f(H) 719 0
31 NGC 6884 PN 20 10 23.6424784416 +46 27 39.631794408   11.9 10.9     ~ 314 1
32 NGC 7009 PN 21 04 10.8155187648 -11 21 48.580157556   12.48 12.07     ~ 996 1
33 NGC 7027 PN 21 07 01.571952 +42 14 10.47120   10.358 8.831 10.157   ~ 2460 1
34 PN Hu 1-2 PN 21 33 08.3106242400 +39 38 09.554428752     12.0     ~ 286 1
35 PN A66 78 PN 21 35 29.3816259120 +31 41 45.449196108   13.04 13.25     [WC5] 327 0
36 NGC 7662 PN 23 25 53.8318792825 +42 32 05.835828380       11.427   ~ 926 0

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