Bibcode
DOI
Luridiana, Valentina; Peimbert, Manuel; Leitherer, Claus
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 527, Issue 1, pp. 110-124.
Advertised on:
12
1999
Journal
Citations
68
Refereed citations
44
Description
Using the photoionization code CLOUDY, we compute photoionization models
for the giant extragalactic H II region NGC 2363 and compare them with
optical observational data. We mainly focus on F(Hβ),
Ne, EW(Hβ), and the ratios of I(λ5007),
I(λ4363), I(λ3727), I(λ6300), I(λ6720), and
I(λ4686) to I(Hβ). We discuss the variations of the emission
spectra obtained with different input parameters. With low-metallicity
models (Z=0.10 Zsolar) we were not able to reproduce the
observed features of the spectrum. We review the implications of the
λ4686 feature on the stellar population of NGC 2363, showing that
it might indicate the presence of Wolf-Rayet (W-R) stars, a fact that
would conflict with the metallicity of the region. We suggest several
possible solutions to this contradiction, such as inadequate stellar
evolutionary tracks, a nonstandard star formation process, and a revised
metallicity. Focusing on the last possibility, we further show that the
disagreement can be satisfactorily overcome by allowing for spatial
temperature fluctuations in the nebula. The presence of temperature
fluctuations allows a self-consistent scenario, which naturally accounts
for the origin of the fluctuations themselves as a result of injection
of mechanical energy by W-R winds and supernova explosions. Accordingly,
we show that the metallicity of NGC 2363 has most probably been
underestimated and that a value of Z~=0.25 Zsolar is in
better agreement with the observational data than the usually adopted
value Z~=0.10 Zsolar. We further find that a star formation
episode extended over a time interval of ~1.6 Myr gives a better fit
than a strictly instantaneous burst. We also derive values for the slope
and the high-mass end of the initial mass function, the age of the
stellar cluster, and the total gaseous mass of the H II region.