Bibcode
DOI
García-Rojas, Jorge; Esteban, César
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 670, Issue 1, pp. 457-470.
Fecha de publicación:
11
2007
Revista
Número de citas
187
Número de citas referidas
159
Descripción
The origin of the abundance discrepancy, i.e., the fact that abundances
derived from recombination lines are larger than those from
collisionally excited lines, is one of the key problems in the physics
of photoionized nebulae. In this work, we analyze and discuss data for a
sample of Galactic and extragalactic H II regions where this abundance
discrepancy has been determined. We find that the abundance discrepancy
factor (ADF) is fairly constant and of order 2 in the available sample
of H II regions. This is a rather different behavior than that observed
in planetary nebulae, where the ADF shows a much wider range of values.
We do not find correlations between the ADF and the O/H,
O++/H+ ratios, the ionization degree,
Te(High), Te(Low)/Te(High), FWHM, and
the effective temperature of the main ionizing stars within the
observational uncertainties. These results indicate that whatever
mechanism is producing the abundance discrepancy in H II regions it does
not substantially depend on those nebular parameters. On the contrary,
the ADF seems to be slightly dependent on the excitation energy, a fact
that is consistent with the predictions of the classical temperature
fluctuations paradigm. Finally, we find that Te-values
obtained from O II recombination lines in H II regions are in agreement
with those obtained from collisionally excited line ratios, a behavior
that is again different from that observed in planetary nebulae. These
similar temperature determinations are in contradiction with the
predictions of the model based on the presence of chemically
inhomogeneous clumps but are consistent with the temperature
fluctuations paradigm. We conclude that all the indications suggest that
the physical mechanism responsible for the abundance discrepancy in H II
regions and planetary nebulae are different.
Based on observations collected at the European Southern Observatory,
Chile, proposals ESO 68.C-0149(A) and ESO 70.C-0008(A).