NUCLEOSYNTHESIS AND CHEMICAL EVOLUTION OF INTERMEDIATE-MASS STARS:
RESULTS FROM PLANETARY NEBULAE
W. J. Maciel, R. D. D. Costa, T. E. P. Idiart
Proceedings from the 11th Symposium on Nuclei in the Cosmos
Electronic publication, Proceedings of Science (PoS) (2010)
Planetary nebulae (PN) are an excellent laboratory to investigate the nucleosynthesis
and chemical evolution of intermediate mass stars. In these objects accurate abundances can be obtained
for several chemical elements that are manufactured or contaminated by the PN progenitor stars, such as He,
N, C, and also elements that were originally produced by more massive stars of previous generations,
namely O, Ne, Ar, and S. Some of these elements are difficult to study in stars, so that PN can be used in
order to complement results obtained from stellar data.
In the past few years, we have obtained a large sample of PN with accurately derived abundances, including
objects of different populations, namely the solar neighbourhood, the galactic disk and anticentre, the
galactic bulge and the Magellanic Clouds.
In this work, we present the results of our recent analysis of the chemical abundances of He, O, N, S, Ar
and Ne in galactic and Magellanic Cloud PN. Average abundances and abundance distributions of all
elements are determined, as well as distance-independent correlations. These correlations are
particularly important, as they can be directly compared with the predictions of recent theoretical
evolutionary models for intermediate mass stars.
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