Showing posts with label Hα images. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hα images. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 06, 2015

Binarity in Planetary Nebulae Gives Clues to Understand the Abundance Discrepancy Problem

One of the most common methods to measure chemical abundances in the Universe is the study of the emission of the ionized gas that composes a number of nebulae related to both star formation (HII regions) and death (planetary nebulae, supernova remnants, stellar outflows). However, it is well known that in all these nebulae the computed abundance values depend on the kind of emission lines considered. Specifically, optical recombination lines (ORLs) provide chemical abundance values that are systematically larger than those obtained using collisionally excited lines (CELs). The abundance discrepancy factor between ORLs and CELs is usually between 1.5 and 3, but in planetary nebulae it has a significant tail extending to much larger values. This is generally known as the "abundance discrepancy problem". It has been around for more than seventy years, and is one of the major unresolved problems in nebular astrophysics. 

Spectroscopic observations with the William Herschel Telescope of three planetary nebulae have shed new light on the problem. Astronomers from the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias have shown that the largest abundance discrepancies (as high as 300 in certain positions in the nebula, see Figure 1) are reached in planetary nebulae that have a close binary central star. The spectroscopic analysis supports the interpretation that two different gas phases coexist in these nebulae: hot gas at 10,000 K with standard chemical abundances metallicity where the CELs can be efficiently excited, and a much cooler (~1000 K) plasma with a highly enhanced content of heavy elements (which is the cause of the cooling) where only ORLs form. This dual nature of the stellar ejecta is not predicted by mass loss theories. How much each gas component contributes to the total mass, and how they are distributed and mixed, is poorly known. 

Figure 1: INT Hα image of Abell 46, one of the planetary nebulae studied in this work, and the one with the highest abundance discrepancy found so far [ TIFF | JPEG | JPEG (inset) ]. 

These observations add a new unexpected ingredient to understanding the abundance discrepancy problem: high abundance discrepancies should be explained in a framework of binary evolution. Several explanations have been proposed, some of which are naturally linked to binarity, like the hypothesis that the ORL emitting gas is high-metallicity ejecta from nova explosions. Other explanations involve the presence of planetary debris that survived the whole evolution of the central stars, or -as proposed in this study- the effects of tidal destruction, accretion and ejection of Jupiter-like planets. At this stage it is difficult to favour any scenario because observational constraints are still limited. Very deep spectroscopy at the highest spatial resolution is perhaps the key to gain further insight into this relevant astrophysical problem. 

Figure 2: Portion of the WHT spectrum of Ou5. Some of the strongest OII and N III ORLs are indicated. These lines are extremely faint in most ionized nebulae, but in objects with large abundance discrepancy factors can reach an intensity of few percents the flux of the hydrogen Hβ [ JPEG ].


More information:
  Romano L.M. Corradi, Jorge García-Rojas, David Jones and Pablo Rodríguez-Gil "Binarity and the abundance discrepancy problem in planetary nebulae", 2015, ApJ, 803, 99. Paper

"Binary stars in the heart of planetary nebulae give clues to understand the chemistry of the Universe", IAC-Excelencia Severo Ochoa research news, 27th April, 2015.


Contact:  

Javier Méndez  (Public Relations Officer)


 

Tuesday, May 05, 2015

Mergers of Galaxy Clusters Can Trigger Star Formation

Hα images of some of the galaxies in CIZA J2242.8+5301, made from images in filters that isolate the redshifted Hα light and continuum respectively (frames BB and NB). The rightmost images show the distribution of Hα light coming from young stellar nurseries [ JPEG ]. 

Galaxies are often found in clusters, which contain many ‘red and dead’ members that stopped forming stars in the distant past. Over billions of years, galaxy clusters build up structure in the universe - merging with adjacent clusters. When this happens, there is a huge release of energy as the clusters collide. The resulting shock wave travels through the cluster like a tsunami, but until now there was no evidence that the galaxies themselves were affected very much.

An international team of astronomers, led by Andra Stroe of Leiden Observatory and David Sobral of Leiden and the University of Lisbon observed the merging galaxy cluster CIZA J2242.8+5301, nicknamed the ‘Sausage’. They used a custom-designed set of narrow-band filters mounted on the Wide Field Camera on the Isaac Newton Telescope, the multi-object spectrograph, Autofib-2, on the William Herschel Telescope, and some other telescopes in Hawaii. They find that far from ‘watching from the back’ the cluster galaxies were transformed by the shock wave, triggering a new wave of star formation.

The new work implies that the merger of galaxy clusters has a major impact on the formation of stars: the shocks lead to turbulence in the galactic gas which then triggers an avalanche-like collapse, leading to the formation of very dense, cold gas clouds, which are vital for the formation of new stars. Star formation at this rate leads to a lot of massive, short-lived stars coming into being, which explode as supernovae a few million years later. The explosions drive huge amounts of gas out of the galaxies and with most of the rest consumed in star formation, the galaxies soon run out of fuel. The cluster mergers make the galaxies even more red and dead.

Every cluster of galaxies in the nearby Universe has experienced a series of mergers during its lifetime, so they should all have passed through a period of extremely vigorous production of stars. Given that the shocks will only however lead to a brief (in astronomical terms) increase in star formation, astronomers have to be very lucky to catch the cluster at a time in its evolution when the galaxies are still being `lit up’ by the shock.

More Information


David Sobral, Andra Stroe, William A. Dawson, David Wittman, M. James Jee, Huub Röttgering, Reinout J. van Weeren and Marcus Brüggen, 2015, "MC2: boosted AGN and star formation activity in CIZA J2242.8+5301, a massive post-merger cluster at z = 0.19", MNRAS, 450, 630. Paper.

Andra Stroe, David Sobral, William Dawson, M. James Jee, Henk Hoekstra, David Wittman, Reinout J. van Weeren, Marcus Brüggen and Huub J. A. Röttgering, 2015, "The rise and fall of star formation in z~0.2 merging galaxy clusters", MNRAS, 450, 646. Paper.

"Giant cosmic tsunami wakes up comatose galaxies", RAS press release, 24 April 2015. 


Contact:

Javier Méndez  (Public Relations Officer)