New Atomic Data for Trans-Iron Elements and Their Application to Abundance Determinations in Planetary Nebulae
N. C. Sterling (1), M. C. Witthoeft (2), D. A. Esteves (3, 4), R. C., Bilodeau (4, 5), A. L. D. Kilcoyne (4), E. C. Red (4), R. A. Phaneuf (3), G., Alna'Washi (3), and A. Aguilar (4) ((1) Michigan State University, (2) NASA, Goddard Space Flight Center, (3) University of Nevada

TL;DR
This paper presents new atomic data for trans-iron elements Se, Kr, and Xe, enabling more accurate abundance measurements in planetary nebulae to study nucleosynthesis and chemical evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first calculations of ionization and recombination data for key ions of Se, Kr, and Xe, crucial for nebular abundance determinations.
Findings
Measured absolute photoionization cross sections for Se and Xe ions.
Calculated ionization and recombination rate coefficients for five ions of Se, Kr, and Xe.
Data will improve accuracy of trans-iron element abundances in planetary nebulae.
Abstract
[Abridged] Investigations of neutron(n)-capture element nucleosynthesis and chemical evolution have largely been based on stellar spectroscopy. However, the recent detection of these elements in several planetary nebulae (PNe) indicates that nebular spectroscopy is a promising new tool for such studies. In PNe, n-capture element abundance determinations reveal details of s-process nucleosynthesis and convective mixing in evolved low-mass stars, as well as the chemical evolution of elements that cannot be detected in stellar spectra. Only one or two ions of a given trans-iron element can typically be detected in individual nebulae. Elemental abundance determinations thus require corrections for the abundances of unobserved ions. Such corrections rely on the availability of atomic data for processes that control the ionization equilibrium of nebulae. Until recently, these data were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear physics research studies · Atomic and Molecular Physics · Astro and Planetary Science
