15,739 research outputs found
Chemical abundances in Galactic planetary nebulae with Spitzer spectra
We present new low-resolution (R~800) optical spectra of 22 Galactic PNe with
Spitzer spectra. These data are combined with recent optical spectroscopic data
available in the literature to construct representative samples of compact (and
presumably young) Galactic disc and bulge PNe with Spitzer spectra. Attending
to the nature of the dust features seen in their Spitzer spectra, Galactic disc
and bulge PNe are classified according to four major dust types (oxygen
chemistry or OC, carbon chemistry or CC, double chemistry or DC, featureless or
F) and subtypes (amorphous and crystalline, and aliphatic and aromatic).
Nebular gas abundances of He, N, O, Ne, S, Cl, and Ar, as well as plasma
parameters (e.g. Ne, Te) are homogeneously derived and we study the median
chemical abundances and nebular properties in Galactic disc and bulge PNe
depending on their Spitzer dust types and subtypes. A comparison of the derived
median abundance patterns with AGB nucleosynthesis predictions show mainly that
i) DC PNe, both with amorphous and crystalline silicates, display
high-metallicity (solar/supra-solar) and the highest He abundances and N/O
ratios, suggesting relatively massive (~3-5 M_sun) hot bottom burning AGB stars
as progenitors; ii) PNe with O-rich and C-rich unevolved dust (amorphous and
aliphatic) seem to evolve from subsolar metallicity (z~0.008) and lower mass
(<3 M_sun) AGB stars; iii) a few O-rich PNe and a significant fraction of
C-rich PNe with more evolved dust (crystalline and aromatic, respectively)
display chemical abundances similar to DC PNe, suggesting that they are related
objects. A comparison of the derived nebular properties with predictions from
models combining the theoretical central star evolution with a simple nebular
model is also presented. Finally, a possible link between the Spitzer dust
properties, chemical abundances, and evolutionary status is discussed.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics (45 pages, 17
figures, and 14 tables); final version (language corrected
Diffuse interstellar bands in fullerene planetary nebulae: the fullerenes - diffuse interstellar bands connection
We present high-resolution (R~15000) VLT/UVES optical spectra of two
planetary nebulae (PNe; Tc 1 and M 1-20) where C60 (and C70) fullerenes have
already been found. These spectra are of high-quality (S/N > 300) for PN Tc 1,
which permits us to search for the expected electronic transitions of neutral
C60 and diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs). Surprisingly, we report the
non-detection of the most intense optical bands of C60 in Tc 1, although this
could be explained by the low C60 column density estimated from the C60
infrared bands if the C60 emission peaks far away from the central star. The
strongest and most common DIBs in both fullerene PNe are normal for their
reddening. Interestingly, the very broad 4428 A DIB and the weaker 6309 A DIB
are found to be unusually intense in Tc 1. We also report the detection of a
new broad (FWHM~5 A) unidentified band at ~6525 A. We propose that the 4428 A
DIB (probably also the 6309 A DIB and the new 6525 A band) may be related to
the presence of larger fullerenes (e.g., C80, C240, C320, and C540) and
buckyonions (multishell fullerenes such as C60@C240 and C60@C240@C540) in the
circumstellar envelope of Tc 1.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics Letters (6
pages, 4 figures, and 1 Table
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