the primordial 4 he abundance: the astrophysical perspective

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The primordial The primordial 4 4 He He abundance: abundance: the astrophysical the astrophysical perspective perspective Valentina Luridiana Valentina Luridiana Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (CSIC) Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (CSIC) Granada Granada

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The primordial 4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective. Valentina Luridiana Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (CSIC) Granada. Outline. why. method. how:. how. tools. uncertainties. my work. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

The primordial The primordial 44He abundance:He abundance:the astrophysical perspectivethe astrophysical perspective

Valentina LuridianaValentina Luridiana

Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (CSIC)Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (CSIC)

GranadaGranada

Page 2: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Outline

why

how tools

method

uncertainties

my work

how:

Page 3: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

The first light nuclides were synthesized in a short time interval following the Big Bang

Page 4: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

The primordial abundances can be used to determine the baryon-to-photon density

4He is the easiest to measure

4He is the least sensitive to

(Fiorentini et al. 1998, PhRD 58, 63506)

the abundances of the first elements depend on the interplay between the reaction rates and the expansion of the Universe

Page 5: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

The determinations of YP are progressively converging, but significant scatter remains

Page 6: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

high-quality measurements of Y and Z are required!

(Fields & Olive 1998, ApJ 506, 177)

since the Universe was born with no heavy elements,

YP = Y (Z=0)(Peimbert & Torres-Peimbert 1974, ApJ 193, 327)

YP is found by extrapolation of the dY / dZ relation to Z = 0

Page 7: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

H II regions are gas clouds ionized by young, massive stars

Page 8: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

(Izotov, Chaffee, & Green 2001, ApJ 562, 727)

The chemical composition of an H II region can be determined through the analysis of its spectrum

Page 9: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Balmer lines are the most important of the H I spectrum because they are bright and because they fall in the optical range

Hydrogen and helium show up in the spectrum as series of recombination lines

Page 10: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

the brightest lines arise from levels a few eV above the ground state

Metals show up in the spectrum as collisionally excited lines

Page 11: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

for example, the line ratio [O III] 4363 / 4959,5007 is sensitive to the electronic temperature Te

The electronic temperature is inferred from suitable line ratios

Page 12: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

the form of the function f depends on the mechanism of line formation:

- collisional lines depend strongly on Te

- recombination lines depend weakly on Te

Once Te has been obtained, the ionic abundances are derived from the line intensities

Page 13: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

The ionic abundances are summed to obtain the elemental intensities

)(I)(IT

)(N)(N

H4686

HHe 2

)H()He(

)H()He(

)H()He(

NN

NN

NN

)(I)(IT

)(N)(N

H5876

HHe 1

Page 14: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

photoionization codes predict the structure and emission spectrum of H II regions

A different kind of analysis of H II regions can be performed by means of photoionization models

Page 15: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

The sources of uncertainty in the determination of Y can be grouped into three broad categories

physics atomic parameters

stellar

parameters

underlying stellar absorption

ionization structure

nebular

parameterstemperature structure

H I collisional enhancement

Page 16: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

solution: good stellar population models

Problem n. 1: Uncertainty in Y is introduced by the stellar absorption underlying the emission lines

)(I)(IT

)(N)(N

HH

He

Page 17: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

If the Stromgren radii of H and He do not coincide, the abundance ratio He / H is either underestimated or overestimated

Problem n. 2: Uncertainty in Y is introduced by the incomplete knowledge of the ionization structure

)H()He(

)H()He(

)H()He(

NN

NN

NN

Page 18: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

If H II regions were density-bounded in all directions, the problem would not exist

Page 19: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

1. applying selection criteria 2. building tailored photoionization models3. using narrow-slit data

There are several ways to deal with the uncertainty associated to the ionization structure

Page 20: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

1. applying selection criteria 2. building tailored photoionization models3. using narrow-slit data

There are several ways to deal with the uncertainty associated to the ionization structure

Page 21: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

1. applying selection criteria 2. building tailored photoionization models3. using narrow-slit data

There are several ways to deal with the uncertainty associated to the ionization structure

Page 22: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

No! Each ion is associated to a typical temperature, and adopting a different one introduces a bias in the derived abundance

One Te fits all?

Problem n. 3: Temperature fluctuations inside H II regions can bias the abundance values

Page 23: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Recombination lines weigh smoothly the Te

structure, collisional lines are enhanced in Te peaks

Hairy problem! The temperature used to find the ionic abundances must be determined with care, otherwise the abundances will be over / underestimated

)H()He(

)()5876(

NNT

HII

)H()O(/

)()5007(

NNKTEeT

HII

recombination line

collisional line

Page 24: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Problem n. 4: A minor contribution to the Balmer lines comes from collisional excitations

)(I)(IT

)(N)(N

HH

He

Page 25: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

The collisional contribution is relevant only in low-metallicity H II regions

in high-Te objects, which are the most metal-poor, the collisional contribution is non-negligible and should be factored out

Page 26: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

The collisional contribution enhances H more than H, mimicking the effect of reddening

KTEeRjCj /)3,1(

)H(

)H(

KTEekRjCj /)4,1(

)H(

)H(

recII

obsII

)H()H(

)H()H(

Page 27: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

To study collisions, we modeled some of the most metal-poor H II regions known

(Thuan et al. 1997, ApJ 477, 661)

(Luridiana et al. 2003, ApJ, 592, 846)

SBS 0335-052, Z=1/40 Zo

Page 28: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Our models of SBS 0335-052 take into account the slit bias

Page 29: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Several observational constraints are fitted to constrain the spatial structure of the object

Page 30: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

An upper limit to the collisional contribution is set by the observed H / H ratio

)(C)(f)(F)(F

)(I)(I

HH10

HH

HH

The observed reddening sets an upper limit to the collisional contribution!

int)β(Cgal)β(Ccol)β(Cobs)β(C HHHH

Page 31: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Our strategy is based on a personalized treatment of the H II regions

problem solution

physics atomic parameters cross fingers

stellar

parameters

stellar absorption exclusion of star; stellar libraries

ionization structure tailored models

nebular

parameterstemperature structure self-consistent solution

H I collisions upper limits; exclude low Z

Page 32: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Our results favor a relatively low primordial helium value, but...

L 2003: Luridiana et al. 2003, ApJ, 592, 846

I 1999: Izotov et al. 1999, ApJ, 527, 757

S 1994: Songaila et al. 1994, Nature, 368, 599

K 2003: Kirkman et al. 2003, ApJS, submitted

PB 2001: Pettini & Bowen 2001, ApJ 560, 41

TV 2001: Théado & Vauclair 2001, A&A 375, 70

S 2000: Suzuki et al. 2000, ApJ 540, 99

Page 33: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

... still much work to be done before the last word can be said!

Source YP

Izotov et al. 1999 0.2452 0.0015 0.0070

Peimbert et al. 2002 0.2391 0.0020 0.0010

Future (2006) 0.2??? 0.0020 0.0005

Questions?

Page 34: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

YP through time: references

Page 35: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Energy-level diagram of He I

Page 36: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Collisional cooling

Page 37: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Heating by photoionization

Page 38: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

Ionization thresholds for common ions

Page 39: The primordial  4 He abundance: the astrophysical perspective

the [S II] 6716/6731 ratio is sensitive to the electronic density Ne

The electronic density (Ne) is inferred from suitable line ratios