The Galactic structure and chemical evolution traced by the population of planetary nebulae
L. Stanghellini, M. Haywood

TL;DR
This study uses a comprehensive set of Galactic planetary nebulae to analyze metallicity gradients, revealing a potential steepening of the Galactic disk's metallicity gradient over time and linking nebulae properties to Galactic structure.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of metallicity gradients in PNe with a homogeneous dataset, morphological classification, and updated distances, highlighting the gradient's evolution over time.
Findings
Radial oxygen gradient of -0.023 dex/kpc for the whole disk.
Steeper gradients observed in PNe with more massive progenitors.
Consistency of PNe metallicity gradients with those from young and intermediate Galactic populations.
Abstract
We use an extended and homogeneous data set of Galactic planetary nebulae (PNe) to study the metallicity gradients and the Galactic structure and evolution. The most up-to-date abundances, distances (calibrated with Magellanic Cloud PNe) have been employed, together with a novel homogeneous morphological classification, to characterize the different PN populations. We confirm that morphological classes have a strong correlation with PN Peimbert's Type, and also with their distribution on the Galactic landscape. We studied the alpha-element distribution within the Galactic disk, and found that the best selected disk population, together with the most reliable PN distance scale yields to a radial oxygen gradient of d[log(O/H)]/dR=-0.023 +- 0.006 dex/ kpc for the whole disk sample, and of d[log(O/H)]/dR= -0.035+-0.024, -0.023+-0.005, and -0.011+-0.013 dex/kpc respectively for Type I, II,…
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