Statistical evolutionary properties of planetary nebulae Thicknesses of the nebulae and temperatures of the stars

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

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Optical Thickness, Planetary Nebulae, Statistical Analysis, Stellar Evolution, Stellar Temperature, Astronomical Spectroscopy, Black Body Radiation, Helium Ions, Spatial Distribution, Stellar Mass, Tables (Data)

Scientific paper

A comparative study of Zanstra temperatures of the central stars of planetary nebulae indicates that when present the discrepancies between TZ H I and TZ He II can be mainly ascribed to the variation of the optical thickness of a nebulae of hydrogen and helium ionized by a star which emits as a black-body. Different evolutionary trends of TZ H I and TZ He II are obtained for planetary nebulae of the subclasses B and C of Greig (1971, 1972): B nebulae spend most of their life in a thick status, whereas C nebulae start as thick objects but they quickly become optically thin. These results give further support to the suggestion by Sabbadin (1984) that planetary nebulae of the subclass B have stellar masses and/or nebular masses which are statistically larger than those of planetary nebulae belonging to the subclass C.

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