Chemical composition

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Planetary nebulae are chemically enriched in elements produced by nuclear processing within the central star. Some are carbon-rich, with twice as much carbon as oxygen, while there is more oxygen than carbon in the Sun. Others are overabundant in nitrogen; the most luminous ones, observed in external galaxies, are conspicuous examples. Helium is modestly enhanced in many. There are objects that contain almost no hydrogen; it is as if the gas had been ejected from these object at the very end of the nuclear-burning process. Planetary nebulae also show a clear indication of the general heavy-element abundance gradient in the Galaxy, presumably a reflection of the original composition of the stars that gave rise to the present nebulae.

As in the case of H II regions, planetary nebulae show discrepancies between the determinations of abundances of heavy elements from faint recombination lines as opposed to those determined from collisionally excited lines, but in a much more severe form. There are some nebulae for which the two methods give the same abundances. However, the most extreme discrepancies are factors of 30 or more in the oxygen abundances. Perhaps this wild variation in planetary nebulae is not surprising, since they surely have regions of material that are strongly enriched in heavy elements and deficient in hydrogen. These regions originate in the complicated nuclear processing of the expelled material ejected from the evolved central star. They would have strong cooling from the heavy-element emissions and thus much lower temperatures than the regions of normal composition. These regions would contribute very little to the hydrogen emission lines because they are hydrogen-poor.

Some, but not all, planetary nebulae contain internal dust. In general, this dust cannot be seen directly but can be detected from the infrared radiation it emits after being heated by nebular and stellar radiation. The presence of dust implies that planetary nebulae are even richer in heavy elements than gas-phase abundance studies suggest.

Among nebulae so far discovered, two are particularly deviant in chemical composition: one is in the globular cluster M15 and the other in the halo (tenuous outer regions) of the Galaxy. Both have very low heavy-element content (down from normal by factors of about 50) but normal helium. Both objects are very old, suggesting that the primeval gas in the Galaxy had a low heavy-element content but an almost normal amount of helium. The origin of most helium in the Galaxy was the big bang, the initial explosion of the universe itself.

Positions in the Galaxy

One of the best indicators of the average age of astronomical objects is their position and motion in the Galaxy. The youngest are in the spiral arms, near the gas from which they have formed; the oldest are not concentrated in the plane of the Galaxy, nor are they found within the spiral arms. By these criteria, the planetaries reveal themselves to be rather middle-aged; they are moderately but not strongly concentrated in the plane; rather, they are concentrated toward the galactic centre, as the older objects are. Their motions in the Galaxy follow elliptical paths, whereas circular orbits are characteristic of younger stars. They belong to the type of distribution often called a “disk population,” to distinguish them from the Population II (very old) and Population I (young) objects proposed by the German American astronomer Walter Baade. There is a wide variation in the ages of planetaries, and some are very young objects.

Evolution of planetary nebulae

A description of the evolution of a planetary nebula begins before the ejection of the nebula itself. As will be discussed below, the central star is a red giant before the ejection. In such a phase it experiences a rapid loss of mass, up to 0.01 Earth mass per day, in the form of a comparatively slowly expanding stellar wind. At this stage the red giant might be heavily obscured by dust that forms from the heavy elements in the wind. Eventually the nature of both the star and its wind changes. The star becomes hotter because its hot core is exposed by the loss of the overlying atmosphere. The inner gas is ionized by radiation from the hot star. The ionization zone moves steadily outward through the slowly moving material of what was formerly the stellar wind. The expansion speed of the gas is typically 30 km (19 miles) per second. Nebulae in this stage are bright but have starlike images as seen from Earth, because they are too small to show a disk. The gas is at a relatively high density—about one million atoms per cubic centimetre—but becomes more dilute as the gas expands. During this stage the nebula is surrounded by neutral hydrogen. It appears to expand faster than the individual atoms of gas in it are moving; the ionized shell is “eating into” the neutral material as the density falls.

The middle stage of evolution occurs when the density has dropped to the point at which the entire mass of gas is ionized. After this stage is reached, some of the ultraviolet radiation escapes into space, and the expansion of the nebula is caused entirely by the motion of the gas. Most planetaries are now in this middle stage. Finally the central star becomes less luminous and can no longer provide enough ultraviolet radiation to keep even the dilute nebula ionized. Once again the outer regions of the nebula become neutral and therefore invisible. Eventually the gas is mingled with the general interstellar gas. A curious feature of several planetaries is that faint rings surrounding the bright inner nebula can be observed; they are the remnants of a previous shell ejected earlier by the star.