Thursday, 28 April 2005
A joint Chile-United Kingdom team led by Simon Casassus (University
of Chile) has used the NOAO-built Phoenix near-infrared spectrometer on
Gemini South to obtain high-resolution spectra (R~75,000) of the [Al
VI] 3.66-micron line region in the planetary nebula NGC 6302 (the Bug
Nebula). By modeling the multi-component structure of the line, the
team has been able to derive values for the electric quadrupole
constant in the [Al VI] transition and measure a reliable isotopic
ratio for aluminum. This is the first time such a constant in an atomic
transition has been measured in any astrophysical object.
The isotopic ratio of Aluminum (Al-26/Al-27) is of astrophysical
interest because it is a signpost of recent nucleosynthesis. Al-27 is
the stable isotope, while Al-26 is radioactive – with a half-life of
720,000 years. Because the ratio is poorly established, the origin of
Al-26 is currently assigned to a range of astrophysical processes
ranging from nova detonations to cosmic-ray collisions in molecular
clouds.
Figure 1. (a) Resulting observed Phoenix spectrum (red points)
of 30 July 2003, and model line profile of [Al VI]; in grey, model
profile of Al-26 had it been present at an isotope ratio of 1. In
(b), co-added spectrum (red points). Light dotted-line does not
include electric-quadrupole hyperfine splitting. The inclusion of
the electric quadrupole hyperfine terms improves the fit (solid grey
line). The original Phoenix spectra were obtained at a spectral
resolution of 75,000.
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The Phoenix-targeted NGC 6302 is the highest excitation planetary
nebula known. Its spectrum can be reproduced by ionization-bounded
photoionization models that assume a 250,000 K central star. The
photoionized coronal lines in NGC 6302 are astonishingly narrow,
explained by a small expansion velocity. This and its rich spectrum
make NGC 6302 an ideal object for the use of hyperfine structure as a
diagnostic tool.
The derived isotopic ratio of Al-26/Al-27 is less than 1/33 in NGC
6302. This is the most stringent upper limit on the relative Al-26
abundance in any astrophysical object to date. Although the measurement
is not constraining enough to quantify the Al-26 production in
Asymptotic Giant Branch stars, which are the progenitors of planetary
nebulae like NGC 6302, the technique is established. Tighter
constraints require deeper spectroscopy of this planetary nebula, and
extension of the analysis to other targets of low or moderate expansion
velocity.
STScI/HST/Gemini Observatory Images
Figure 2. A Hubble Space Telescope image of NGC 6302 with an
inset showing the Gemini South acquisition R-band image (upper right)
and the approximate location of the Phoenix spectrograph slit (small
blue bar in inset)
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More details can be found in the paper "Hyperfine splitting of [Al VI] 3.66-micron and the Al isotopic ratio in NGC 6302", by S. Casassus, P. J Storey, M. J. Barlow and P. F. Roche to appear in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. |