Gas-phase Fe/O and Fe/N abundances in Star-Forming Regions. Relations between nucleosynthesis, metallicity and dust
J. E. M\'endez-Delgado, K. Kreckel, C. Esteban, J. Garc\'ia-Rojas, L., Carigi, A.A.C. Sander, M. Palla, M. Chru\'sli\'nska, I. De Looze, M., Rela\~no, S.A. van der Giessen, E. Reyes-Rodr\'iguez, S. F. S\'anchez

TL;DR
This study examines the gas-phase abundances of Fe, O, and N in star-forming regions, exploring their nucleosynthetic origins, dust depletion, and implications for metallicity and dust content in nebulae and galaxies.
Contribution
It provides a homogeneous analysis of Fe, O, and N abundances in nebulae, revealing correlations and dust depletion patterns, and offers a new method to estimate Fe dust fraction in ionized environments.
Findings
Moderate correlation between Fe/O and O/H ($r=-0.59$).
Strong correlation between Fe/N and N/H ($r=-0.80$).
Fe-dust depletion is minimal at low metallicity ($ ext{log(Fe/O)} ightarrow -1.7$).
Abstract
In stars, metallicity is usually traced using Fe, while in nebulae, O serves as the preferred proxy. Both elements have different nucleosynthetic origins and are not directly comparable. Additionally, in ionized nebulae, Fe is heavily depleted onto dust grains. We investigate the distribution of Fe gas abundances in a sample of 452 star-forming nebulae with \feiii~ detections and their relationship with O and N. Additionally, we analyze the depletion of Fe onto dust grains in photoionized environments. We homogeneously determine the chemical abundances with direct determinations of electron temperature (), considering the effect of possible internal variations of this parameter. We adopt a sample of 300 Galactic stars to interpret the nebular findings. We find a moderate linear correlation () between Fe/O and O/H. In turn, we report a stronger correlation…
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.
