The dust and gas content of the Crab Nebula
P. J. Owen, M. J. Barlow

TL;DR
This study models the Crab Nebula's gas and dust content using radiative transfer simulations, revealing the nebula's composition, mass, and dust properties, with implications for supernova yields and dust survival.
Contribution
It introduces detailed clumped and smooth distribution models for the Crab Nebula, constraining gas and dust masses and compositions, and compares results with supernova nucleosynthesis predictions.
Findings
Gas mass of 7.0 Msun in clumped models
Gas-to-dust mass ratio of 26-39
Total gas plus dust mass of 7.2 Msun
Abstract
We have constructed MOCASSIN photoionization plus dust radiative transfer models for the Crab Nebula core-collapse supernova (CCSN) remnant, using either smooth or clumped mass distributions, in order to determine the chemical composition and masses of the nebular gas and dust. We computed models for several different geometries suggested for the nebular matter distribution but found that the observed gas and dust spectra are relatively insensitive to these geometries, being determined mainly by the spectrum of the pulsar wind nebula which ionizes and heats the nebula. Smooth distribution models are ruled out since they require 16-49 Msun of gas to fit the integrated optical nebular line fluxes, whereas our clumped models re quire 7.0 Msun of gas. A global gas-phase C/O ratio of 1.65 by number is derived, along with a He/H number ratio of 1.85, neither of which can be matched by current…
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