The Cocoon Nebula and its ionizing star: do stellar and nebular abundances agree?
J. Garc\'ia-Rojas (1,2), S. Sim\'on-D\'iaz (1,2), C. Esteban (1,2), ((1) IAC, Tenerife, Spain, (2) Dep. Astrofisica, ULL, Tenerife, Spain)

TL;DR
This study compares nebular and stellar chemical abundances in the Cocoon nebula to address discrepancies in abundance measurements, finding good agreement when considering temperature fluctuations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of nebular and stellar abundances in a Galactic HII region using state-of-the-art spectroscopic analysis, addressing the CELs versus recombination lines discrepancy.
Findings
Nebular and stellar abundances are similar, consistent with the Orion nebula.
Small temperature fluctuations explain abundance discrepancies.
Homogeneity of local Galactic chemical composition is confirmed.
Abstract
(Abridged) Main sequence massive stars embedded in an HII region should have the same chemical abundances as the surrounding nebular gas+dust. The Cocoon nebula, a close-by Galactic HII region ionized by a narrow line B0.5 V single star (BD+46 3474), is an ideal target to perform a detailed comparison of nebular and stellar abundances in the same Galactic HII region. We investigate the chemical content of O, N and S in the Cocoon nebula from two different points of view: an empirical analysis of the nebular spectrum and a detailed spectroscopic analysis of its ionizing B-type star using state-of-the-art stellar atmosphere modeling. By comparing the stellar and nebular abundances, we aim to indirectly address the long-standing problem of the discrepancy found between abundances obtained from collisionally excited lines (CELs) and optical recombination lines in photoionized nebulae. We…
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