Green Bank Telescope Observations of 3He+: HII Regions
Dana S. Balser, T. M. Bania

TL;DR
This study uses Green Bank Telescope observations of 3He+ in HII regions to confirm models predicting minimal 3He production in stars due to thermohaline mixing, revealing a small negative abundance gradient across the Galaxy.
Contribution
First precise measurements of 3He+ in multiple HII regions confirming stellar evolution models with thermohaline mixing.
Findings
Detected 3He+ in all observed HII regions.
Derived a 3He/H abundance gradient of -0.116 +/- 0.022 x 10^-5.
Results support models predicting negligible net 3He production from stars.
Abstract
During the era of primordial nucleosynthesis the light elements 2H, 3He, 4He, and 7Li were produced in significant amounts and these abundances have since been modified primarily by stars. Observations of 3He+ in HII regions located throughout the Milky Way disk reveal very little variation in the 3He/H abundance ratio---the "3He Plateau"---indicating that the net effect of 3He production in stars is negligible. This is in contrast to much higher 3He/H abundance ratios found in some planetary nebulae. This discrepancy is known as the "3He Problem". Stellar evolution models that include thermohaline mixing can resolve the 3He Problem by drastically reducing the net 3He production in most stars. These models predict a small negative 3He/H abundance gradient across the Galactic disk. Here we use the Green Bank Telescope to observe 3He+ in five HII regions with high accuracy to confirm the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
