Other
Scientific paper
Jan 2011
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2011aas...21725604d&link_type=abstract
American Astronomical Society, AAS Meeting #217, #256.04; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 43, 2011
Other
Scientific paper
We have measured the recently identified 3.625 micron [Zn IV] fine-structure line (Dinerstein & Geballe 2001, ApJ, 562, 515) in a dozen Galactic planetary nebulae (Dinerstein et al. 2007, BAAS, 211, 100.14). Because Zn is the least refractory of the Fe peak elements, the gas phase [Zn/H] abundance can be used as a proxy for the elemental [Fe/H] in the progenitor star, in contrast to Fe itself, which is heavily depleted into dust. We find that the observed Milky Way nebulae fall into two categories: objects which have roughly solar values of [Zn/H] and [O/Zn]; and nebulae with low Zn (clustering around [Zn/H] = -0.6) and elevated [O/H]. Most of the latter group have high radial velocities, |vrad| > 60 km/s. Our interpretation is that the objects with solar abundances and low velocities originate from thin disk stars, while the nebulae with low Zn are descendants of thick disk stars. A further implication is that the common assumption that O and other alpha species are reliable indicators of metallicity in planetary nebulae is not necessarily valid, and can lead to erroneous conclusions about the parent stellar population. This effect is particularly acute for O since [O/Fe] can be large, especially in metal-poor populations. In a planetary nebula formed by a star with this abundance pattern, a high value of [(O, alpha)/Fe] can offset a low [Fe/H], producing near-solar abundances for O and other alpha species. This can make it appear that the star belongs to a more metal-rich (in [Fe/H]) population than is actually the case. Obtaining Zn abundances for larger samples of planetary nebulae will be crucial to disentangling these abundance ratios and breaking the potential degeneracy of the O and alpha abundances.
(This research was supported by NSF grant 0708245.)
Dinerstein Harriet L.
Geballe Thomas Ronald
Sterling Nicholas C.
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