CHEMICAL EVOLUTION OF THE MAGELLANIC CLOUDS BASED ON PLANETARY NEBULAE
W. J. Maciel, R. D. D. Costa, T. E. P. Idiart,
IAU Symposium 256, The Magellanic System: Stars, Gas, and Galaxies,
CUP, ed. J. Th. van Loon, J. M. Oliveira,
(in press, electronic publication), (2008)
Planetary nebulae (PN) are an essential tool in the study of the chemical
evolution of the Milky Way and galaxies of the Local Group, particularly the
Magellanic Clouds. In this work, we present some recent results on the determination
of chemical abundances from PN in the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, and compare
these results with data from our own Galaxy and other galaxies in the Local Group.
As a result of our continuing long term program, we have a large database comprising
about 300 objects for which reliable abundances of several elements from He to Ar
have been obtained. Such data can be used to derive constraints to the nucleosynthesis
processes in the progenitor stars in galaxies of different metallicities. We also
investigate the time evolution of the oxygen abundances in the SMC by deriving the
properties of the PN progenitor stars, which include their masses and ages. We have
then obtained an age-metallicity relation taking into account both oxygen and [Fe/H]
abundances. We show that these results have an important consequence on the star
formation rate of the SMC, in particular by suggesting a star formation burst in
the last 2-3 Gyr.
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