PLANETARY NEBULAE AS PROBES FOR GALACTIC CHEMICAL EVOLUTION
R. D. D. Costa, W. J. Maciel
Planetary Nebulae in our Galaxy and beyond, IAU Symposium 234,
ed. M. J. Barlow, R. H. Mendez,ASP, 243-250 (2006)
The role of planetary nebulae as probes for the galactic chemical
evolution is reviewed. Their abundances throughout the Galaxy are
discussed for key elements, in particular oxygen and other alpha
elements. The abundance distribution derived from planetary nebulae
leads to the establishment of radial abundance gradients in the
galactic disk that are important constraints to model the chemical
evolution of the Galaxy. The radial gradient, well determined for
the solar neighborhood, is examined for distinct regions. For the
galactic anticenter in particular, the observational data confirm
results from galactic evolution models that point to a decreasing
in the gradient slope at large galactocentric distances. The possible
time evolution of the radial gradient is also examined comparing
samples of planetary nebulae of different ages, and the results
indicate that a flattening in the gradient occurred, which is
confirmed by some galactic evolution models. The galactic bulge is
another important region whose modeling can be constrained by
observational results obtained from planetary nebulae. Results
derived in the last few years indicate that bulge nebulae have
an abundance distribution similar to that of disk objects,
however with a larger dispersion.
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