We investigated the abundance ratio of 12C/13C in planetary nebulae
by examining emission lines arising from \ion{C}{3} 2s2p ^3P_{2,1,0} \to 2s^2
^1S_0. Spectra were retrieved from the International Ultraviolet Explorer
archives, and multiple spectra of the same object were coadded to achieve
improved signal-to-noise. The 13C hyperfine structure line at 1909.6 \AA
was detected in NGC 2440. The 12C/13C ratio was found to be
∼4.4±1.2. In all other objects, we provide an upper limit for the flux
of the 1910 \AA line. For 23 of these sources, a lower limit for the
12C/13C ratio was established. The impact on our current
understanding of stellar evolution is discussed.
The resulting high signal-to-noise \ion{C}{3} spectrum helps constrain the
atomic physics of the line formation process. Some objects have the measured
1907/1909 flux ratio outside the low-electron density theoretical limit for
12C. A mixture of 13C with 12C helps to close the gap somewhat.
Nevertheless, some observed 1907/1909 flux ratios still appear too high to
conform to the presently predicted limits. It is shown that this limit, as well
as the 1910/1909 flux ratio, are predominantly influenced by using the standard
partitioning among the collision strengths for the multiplet 1S0--3PJ
according to the statistical weights. A detailed calculation for the fine
structure collision strengths between these individual levels would be
valuable.Comment: ApJ accepted: 19 pages, 3 Figures, 2 Table