The Primordial Helium Abundance: Towards Understanding and Removing the Cosmic Scatter in the dY/dZ Relation
Preprint
- 2 February 2000
Abstract
We present results from photoionization models of low-metallicity HII regions. These nebulae form the basis for measuring the primordial helium abundance. Our models show that the helium ionization correction factor (ICF) can be non-negligible for nebulae excited by stars with effective temperatures larger than 40,000 K. Furthermore, we find that when the effective temperature rises to above 45,000 K, the ICF can be significantly negative. This result is independent of the choice of stellar atmosphere. However, if an HII region has an [O III] 5007/[O I] 6300 ratio greater than 300, then our models show that, regardless of its metallicity, it will have a negligibly small ICF. A similar, but metallicity dependent, result was found using the [O III] 5007/H$\beta$ ratio. These two results can be used as selection criteria to remove nebulae with potentially non-negligible ICFs. Using our metallicity independent criterion on the data of Izotov & Thuan (1998) results in a 20% reduction of the rms scatter about the best fit $Y-Z$ line. A fit to the selected data results in a slight increase of the value of the primordial helium abundance.
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- Version 1, 2000-02-02, ArXiv
- Published version: The Astrophysical Journal, 536 (2), 773.
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