Bibcode
Luridiana, V.; Simón-Díaz, S.; Cerviño, M.; González Delgado, R. M.; Porter, R. L.; Ferland, G. J.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 691, Issue 2, pp. 1712-1728 (2009).
Advertised on:
2
2009
Journal
Citations
30
Refereed citations
23
Description
Nonionizing stellar continua are a potential source of photons for
continuum pumping in the hydrogen Lyman transitions. In the environments
where these transitions are optically thick, de-excitation occurs
through higher series lines. As a result, the emitted flux in the
affected lines has a fluorescent contribution in addition to the usual
recombination one; in particular, Balmer emissivities are systematically
enhanced above case B predictions. The effectiveness of such a mechanism
in H II regions and the adequacy of photoionization models as a tool to
study it are the two main focuses of this work. We find that
photoionization models of H II regions illuminated by low-resolution
(λ/δλ lsim 1000) population synthesis models
significantly overpredict the fluorescent contribution to the Balmer
lines; the bias has typical values of the order of a few hundredths of a
dex, with the exact figure depending on the parameters of the specific
model and the simulated aperture. Conversely, photoionization models in
which the nonionizing part of the continuum is omitted or is not
transferred significantly underpredict the fluorescent contribution to
the Balmer lines, producing a bias of similar amplitude in the opposite
direction. Realistic estimations of the actual fluorescent fraction of
the Balmer intensity require photoionization models in which the
relevant portion of the stellar continuum is adequately represented,
that is, its resolution is high in the region of the Lyman lines. In
this paper, we carry out such an estimation and discuss the variations
to be expected as the simulated observational setup and the stellar
population's parameters are varied. In all the cases explored, we find
that fluorescent excitation provides a significant contribution to the
total Balmer emissivity. We also show that differential fluorescent
enhancement may produce line-of-sight differences in the Balmer
decrement, mimicking interstellar extinction. Fluorescent excitation
emerges from our study as a small but important mechanism for the
enhancement of Balmer lines. As such, we recommend to take it into
account in the abundance analysis of photoionized regions, particularly
in the case of high-precision applications such as the determination of
primordial helium.
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