A Detailed Look at Chemical Abundances in Magellanic Cloud Planetary Nebulae. I. The Small Magellanic Cloud
Richard A. Shaw, Ting-Hui Lee, Letizia Stanghellini, James E. Davies,, D. An\'ibal Garc\'ia-Hern\'andez, Pedro Garc\'ia-Lario, Jos\'e V., Perea-Calder\'on, Eva Villaver, Arturo Manchado, Stacy Palen, Bruce Balick

TL;DR
This study analyzes elemental abundances in Small Magellanic Cloud planetary nebulae using optical and infrared spectra, compares results across studies, evaluates ionization correction methods, and investigates nucleosynthesis signatures.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive abundance analysis combining optical and IR data, assesses the accuracy of ionization correction factors, and explores nucleosynthesis effects in SMC PNe.
Findings
Most ICFs work well at low metallicity
No evidence for O depletion via O-N cycle in progenitors
Low S/O ratios similar to Galactic PNe
Abstract
We present an analysis of elemental abundances of He, N, O, Ne, S, and Ar in Magellanic Cloud planetary nebulae (PNe), and focus initially on 14 PNe in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). We derived the abundances from a combination of deep, high dispersion optical spectra, as well as mid-infrared (IR) spectra from the Spitzer Space Telescope. A detailed comparison with prior SMC PN studies shows that significant variations among authors of relative emission line flux determinations lead to systematic discrepancies in derived elemental abundances between studies that are >~0.15 dex, in spite of similar analysis methods. We used ionic abundances derived from IR emission lines, including those from ionization stages not observable in the optical, to examine the accuracy of some commonly used recipes for ionization correction factors (ICFs). These ICFs, which were developed for ions observed…
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