The evolution of planetary nebulae VII. Modelling planetary nebulae of distant stellar systems
D. Sch\"onberner, R. Jacob, C. Sandin, M. Steffen

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical models to investigate how metallicity affects planetary nebulae properties and expansion, revealing that lower metallicity leads to faster expansion and different dynamical behaviors.
Contribution
First systematic hydrodynamical modeling of planetary nebulae across different metallicities, highlighting the impact of metal content on nebula evolution and expansion.
Findings
Lower metallicity results in faster outer shell expansion.
Metal-poor nebulae are more prone to thermal disequilibrium.
Hydrodynamics significantly influence nebula properties beyond stellar wind effects.
Abstract
By means of hydrodynamical models we do the first investigations of how the properties of planetary nebulae are affected by their metal content and what can be learned from spatially unresolved spectrograms of planetary nebulae in distant stellar systems. We computed a new series of 1D radiation-hydrodynamics planetary nebulae model sequences with central stars of 0.595 M_sun surrounded by initial envelope structures that differ only by their metal content. At selected phases along the evolutionary path, the hydrodynamic terms were switched off, allowing the models to relax for fixed radial structure and radiation field into their equilibrium state with respect to energy and ionisation. The analyses of the line spectra emitted from both the dynamical and static models enabled us to systematically study the influence of hydrodynamics as a function of metallicity and evolution. We also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astronomical and nuclear sciences
