Planetary nebulae in M33: probes of AGB nucleosynthesis and ISM abundances
Fabio Bresolin (IfA, U. Hawaii Honolulu), Grazyna Stasinska (LUTH,, Observatoire de Paris), Jose M. Vilchez (IAA-CSIC Granada), Josh D. Simon, (Carnegie Observatories), Erik Rosolowsky (UBC Okanagan)

TL;DR
This study uses deep optical spectroscopy of planetary nebulae in M33 to analyze their chemical abundances, revealing insights into stellar nucleosynthesis and the galaxy's chemical evolution, including abundance gradients and element correlations.
Contribution
First detailed spectroscopic analysis of PNe in M33 linking nebular abundances with galactic chemical evolution, confirming element correlations and abundance gradient.
Findings
Confirmed Ne/H and O/H correlation in PNe
Found no oxygen offset between PNe and HII regions
Measured ISM alpha-element abundance gradient of -0.025 dex/kpc
Abstract
We have obtained deep optical spectrophotometry of 16 planetary nebulae in M33, mostly located in the central two kpc of the galaxy, with the Subaru and Keck telescopes. We have derived electron temperatures and chemical abundances from the detection of the [OIII]4363 line for the whole sample. We have found one object with an extreme nitrogen abundance, 12+log(N/H)=9.20, accompanied by a large helium content. After combining our data with those available in the literature for PNe and HII regions, we have examined the behavior of nitrogen, neon, oxygen and argon in relation to each other, and as a function of galactocentric distance. We confirm the good correlation between Ne/H and O/H for PNe in M33. Ar/H is also found to correlate with O/H. This strengthens the idea that at the metallicity of the bright PNe analyzed in M33, which is similar to that found in the LMC, these elements…
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