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Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae Paola Marigo Astronomy Department, Padova University, Italy Lèo Girardi Trieste Observatory, INAF, Italy

Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

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Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae. Paola Marigo Astronomy Department, Padova University, Italy L èo Girardi Trieste Observatory, INAF, Italy. Why population synthesis of PNe?. Understand basic properties of PNe and their nuclei - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Stellar Population SynthesisIncluding Planetary Nebulae

Paola Marigo Astronomy Department, Padova University, Italy

Lèo Girardi Trieste Observatory, INAF, Italy

Page 2: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Why population synthesis of PNe?

Understand basic properties of PNe and their nucleie.g. M-R relation, line ratios, optical thickness/thinness,transition time, nuclear regime (H-burn. or He-burn.)

Analyse PNLFs in different galaxiese.g. depedence of the bright cut-off on SFR, IMF, Z(t)

Constrain progenitors’ AGB evolutione.g. superwind phase, Mi-Mf relation, nucleosynthesisand dredge-up

Page 3: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Basic requirements: extended grids of PN models

Kahn (1983,1989)

Kahn & West (1985)

Volk & Kwok (1985)

Stasińska (1989)

Ciardullo et al. (1989)

Jacoby (1989)

Kahn & Breitschwerdt (1990)

Dopita et al. (1992)

Mendez et al. (1993)

Stanghellini (1995)

Mendez & Soffner (1997)

Stasińska et al. (1998)

Stanghellini & Renzini (2000)

Marigo et al. (2001; 2004)

Simplified approach still necessary. Various degrees of approximation: AGB evolution, nebular dynamics; photoionisation

Recent improvements of hydrodynamical calculations: large sets now becoming available

Perinotto et al. 2004

Schoenberner et al. 2005

Page 4: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

central star mass (Mi, Z) [p] AGB wind density and chemical comp. of the ejecta (r, t)

POST-AGB EVOLUTION logL-logTeff tracks (H-burn./He burn.) [p] fast wind

DYNAMICAL EVOLUTION OF THE NEBULA

IONISATION AND NEBULAR EMISSION LINES

photoionisation code [p] or other semi-empirical recipe [p]

(Mneb, Vexp) parametrisation .interacting-winds model [p]

Synthetic PN evolution:basic ingredients

AGB EVOLUTION

Page 5: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Mi=1.7 M; MCS= 0.6 M; Z=0.019

Output of a synthetic PN model

Time evolution of:

• Ionised mass

• nebular radius

• expansion velocity

• optical configurations

• emission line luminosities

Page 6: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Synthetic Samples of PNe

MONTE CARLO TECHNIQUE

SCHEME A) (Jacoby, Mendez, Stasinska, Stanghellini)

Randomly generate a synthetic PN sample obeying a given central-star mass N(Mc) distribution

Mi an age is randomly assigned in the [0, tPN] interval

Stellar and nebular parameters (L, Teff, Vexp, Mion, Rion, F) from grid-interpolations

Page 7: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Synthetic Samples of PNe

N(Mi,Z) (Mi) (t – H) tPN

H(Mi,Z) Main Sequence lifetime

tPN PN lifetime «H

(Mi) Initial mass function

(t – H) Star formation rate

Z(t) Age-metallicity relation

SCHEME B) (Marigo et al. 2004)

Randomly generate a synthetic PN sample obeying a given initial mass N(Mi,Z) distribution

Mi an age is randomly assigned in the [0, tPN] interval

Stellar and nebular parameters (L, Teff, Vexp, Mion, Rion, F) from grid-interpolations

N(Mi)

Mi

MONTE CARLO TECHNIQUE

Page 8: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Different synthetic schemes

Author Jacoby 89 Stasinska91 Mendez97 Stanghellini00 Marigo04 ————————————————————————————————————————————————

CS masses gaussian gaussian exponential+cut-off pop-synthesis pop-synthesis

PAGB tracks S83+WF86 S83 S83+B95 VW94 VW94

Dynamics (Mneb,Vneb) (Mneb,Vneb) interacting winds

Line fluxes phot. model phot. model analytic recipe phot. model

SFR constant +cut-off constant various choices

Page 9: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Properties of PNe and their Central Stars

Mion-Rion relation

Nel-Rion relation

Line ratios

Optical thickness/thinness

Transition time

Nuclear burning regime

Page 10: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

How to explain the observed invariance of the bright cut-off ?

I. Jacoby (1996): narrow CSPN mass distribution (0.58 ± 0.02 M) over the age range (3-10 Gyr) , i.e. initial mass range (1-2 M)

II. Ciardullo & Jacoby (1999) : circumstellar extinction always estinguishes the overluminous and massive-progenitor PNe below the cut-off. III. Marigo et al. (2004): still open problem, difficult to recover for Ellipticals

IV. Ciardullo (2005): Possible contribution of PNe in binary systems

SO FAR NOT ROBUST THEORETICAL EXPLANATION

Page 11: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

WHICH PNe FORM THE CUT-OFF?

1. OIII 5007 LUMINOSITIES AS A FUNCTION OF AGE

Jacoby 1989

Stasińska et al. 1998

Marigo et al. 2004

Page 12: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

WHICH PNe FORM THE CUT-OFF?

2. CENTRAL MASS DISTRIBUTION AS A FUNCTION OF LIMITING MAGNITUDE

Marigo et al. 2004

MCSPN 0.70-0.75 M; Mi 2-3 M; age 0.5-1.0 Gyr

Page 13: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

DEPENDENCE ON THE AGE OF THE LAST EPISODE OF STAR FORMATION

Mmax=0.63Mmax=0.70Mmax=1.19

0.680.6950.77

Jacoby 1989

Mendez & Soffner 1997

Stanghellini 1995

Marigo et al. 2004

0.610.650.680.741.15

Page 14: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

A FEW CONCLUDING REMARKS

Population-age dependence of the PNLF: difficulty to explain the observed invariance of the bright cut-off in galaxies from late to early types

Still to be included: full hydrodynamics, non-sphericity, binary progenitors, etc.

Population synthesis including PNe is a powerful — still not fully exploited — tool to get insight into several aspects of PNe and their central stars e.g. ionised mass-radius rel.; electron density-radius rel.; [OIII]5007/HeII4686 anticorrel., Te distribution; [OIII]5007/H distribution; optical thickness/thinness; H-/He-burners, transition time; Mi-Mf relation; distribution of chemical abundances

Page 15: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

TRANSITION TIME

MOSTLY UNKNOWN PARAMETER: dependence on Menv, pulse phase, MLR, Mcs, etc.

Stanghellini & Renzini 2000

Page 16: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

DEPENDENCE OF THE PNLF ON TRANSITION TIME

(continued)

Stanghellini 1995 Marigo et al. 2004

Differences in the bright cut-off due to different ttr show up for larger Mmax, or equivalently for younger ages

Solid line: constat ttr; dashed line: mass -dependent ttr

Page 17: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

DEPENDENCE OF THE PNLF ON H-/He-BURNING TRACKS

Jacoby 1989 Marigo et al. 2004

H-burn.

He-burn.

Differences in the bright cut-off due to different tracks show up for older ages

The bright cut-off is reproduced by more massive H-burningCS (0.65 M) compared to He-burning CS (0.61 M)

Page 18: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

C-star LF Mi-Mf relation WD mass distr.

Renzini & Voli 1981

Marigo 1999

Van der Hoek & Groenewegen 1997

Synthetic AGB evolution: observational constraints

Marigo 2001

Page 19: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Mostly used sets:

Schoenberner (1983) +Bloecker (1995)CS masses: 0.53 – 0.94 M

Metallicities: Z=0.021

Vassiliadis & Wood (1994) CS masses: 0.59 – 0.94 M

Metallicities: Z= 0.016, 0.008, 0.004, 0.001

Recent sets (synthetic):

Frankovsky (2003)CS masses : 0.56 – 0.94 M

Metallicities: Z= 0.016, 0.004

H-burning central stars

He-burning central stars

loops less luminous longer evolutionary timescales

Post-AGB evolutionary tracks

Page 20: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

PN DYNAMICS

(Kahn 1983; Volk & Kwok 1985; Breitschwerdt & Kahn 1990)

Interacting-winds model

Simple scheme Combination of constant parameters (Mneb, Vexp, R/R)

Page 21: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

NEBULAR FLUXES:photoionisation codes

INPUT • Nebular geometry• Rin, Rout• density N(H) • Elemental abundances (H,He,C,N,O,etc.)• L and Teff of the CSPN

Example: CLOUDY (Ferland 2001)Mi=2.0 M; MCSPN=0.685 M; Z=0.008; H-burn.; Mion=0.091 M; tPN=3000 yr

OUTPUT• Te (volume average)• ionisation fractions• line fluxes

Jacoby, Ciardullo et al.Stasinska et al.Marigo et al.

Page 22: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE NEBULA

ABSORBING FACTOR (MKCJ93)

ABSORBED IONISING PHOTONS EMITTED IONISING PHOTONS

Mendez et al. : randomly assigned as a function of Teff, following results of model atmospheres applied to Galactic CSPN.

In particular, on heating tracks with T>40000 K a

random uniform distribution 0.05 max

Jacoby et al.

Stasinska et al. derives from the coupling between nebular dynamics and photoionisation Marigo et al.

Simulated PN sample:

M5007 < 1; Ntot = 500SFR=const.; Z=0.019; ttr=500 yrH-burn. and He-burn. tracks optically thick ; optically thin

Page 23: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Ionised mass-radius relation

Observed data from Zhang (1995), Boffi & Stanghellini (1994)

Simulated PN sample:

M5007 < 1; Ntot = 500SFR=const.; Z=0.019; ttr=500 yrH-burn. and He-burn. tracks optically thick ; optically thin

Page 24: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Electron density-radius relation

Observed data from Phillips (1998)

Simulated PN sample:

M5007 < 1; Ntot = 500SFR=const.; Z=0.019; ttr=500 yrH-burn. and He-burn. tracks optically thick ; optically thin

Page 25: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

Line ratios

Stasinska 1989

Page 26: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

NEBULAR FLUXES: a semi-empirical recipe

Mendez et al. : Once specified (L,Teff) of the CSPN

Recombination theory for optically thick case H fluxes

Random -factor correction true H fluxes

Empirical distribution I(5007)I(H) HOIII 5007 fluxes

Page 27: Stellar Population Synthesis Including Planetary Nebulae

I([OIII]5007)/I(H) DISTRIBUTION of GALACTIC PNe

Observed (McKenna et al. 1996)

Predicted (He-burning tracks)

Predicted (He-burning tracks)