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- From: ethan@emx.cc.utexas.edu (Ethan T. Vishniac)
- Newsgroups: sci.physics,sci.astro
- Subject: The Primordial Abundance of Helium
- Date: 28 Jan 1993 09:31:26 -0600
- Organization: The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas
- Lines: 78
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1k8u8eINNb5p@emx.cc.utexas.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: emx.cc.utexas.edu
-
-
- Given all the discussion of cosmology and the BB recently
- I thought I would contribute something new. I went
- to a talk last Tuesday by Evan Skillman who has been
- working for several years on abundances in HII (ionized
- hydrogen for you physicists) regions in metal poor
- galaxies. One of the goals of his work has been to
- recover the primordial value of the Helium abundance
- (that is, before stellar enrichment). Since HII regions
- surround bright and massive stars this quantity is
- not directly observable even in the most metal poor
- galaxies, but rather one plots the He abundance against
- the C, N, or O (the last two usually) and looks for
- the zero intercept for the data set. The significance
- of the result is that the standard model of cosmological
- nucleosynthesis makes lots of He4, but no C12 (or heavier
- atoms). The exact amount of He4 is tied to the current
- temperature of the microwave background (very well determined
- now) and the average density of ordinary matter (very poorly
- determined except through this argument). Observations of
- abundances of D, He3, and Li7 seem to indicate that
- one expects Y_p (the primoridal abundance of He4 by mass fraction)
- to be between 0.236 and 0.243. These limits are difficult
- to set firmly, but are probably reasonable. The possibility of
- a major revision through the discovery of a systematic error
- in previous abundance analyses is always present at some level.
-
- On the other hand, previous observations have suggested that Y_p
- lies in the range 0.228\pm 0.005. These observations suffer
- from uncertainties in modeling the physical conditions inside
- HII regions. For example there are usually several exciting
- stars in bright HII regions and a lot of inhomogeneity in the
- emitting gas. Values far outside this range have been reported
- for some metal poor systems, including some that were much
- lower, however such reports have been shown to suffer from numerous
- problems, including the presence of spectral features due to
- the exciting stars which were misinterpreted as part of the HII
- regions emission. Discarding systems for which the necessary
- corrections are large one gets the above range, which is discrepant
- with the theoretical prediction at the 2sigma level. Enough
- to cause a fair amount of discomfort but not enough to force
- a major revions of the standard model.
-
- One of the problems with the analysis of the observational
- data is that the low metal end of the line has been determined
- by just one or two objects while the objects at greater
- metal abundance still show a fair amount of scatter, probably
- due to problems of interpretation. Evan and his collaborators
- have succeeded in filling in part of the low metal range
- with 10 new systems found in extremely low luminosity galaxies.
- The new data is somewhat better, of course, because of
- technical improvements. He found that:
-
- 1) The very low metal systems show about the same amount of scatter
- as the previous data. This means that the size of the error for
- the intercept has not changed, although its position did change
- slightly. Using the same general analysis as previously he
- quoted a Y_p about 1 sigma higher.
-
- 2) The emissivities used in previous analyses are slightly in error.
- The nature of the error is such that it didn't show up at temperatures
- of 10^4 degrees, typical of HII regions in our galaxy, but do at
- the higher temperatures typical of very metal poor HII regions.
- The revised emissivities are due to Smits and lead to
- Y_p=0.239\pm 0.005. The answer does not seem to depend on whether
- Oxygen or Nitrogen is used as the indicator of stellar enrichment.
- In fact, although many people have suggested that N is due to secondary
- enrichment, no evidence for this is seen in the data.
-
-
- The net effect is that the "observed" value of Y_p now sits in the
- middle of the predicted range. Of course, further movements of
- comparable size remain possible.
- --
- "Quis tamen tale studium, quo ad primam omnium rerum causam evehimur,
- tamquam inutile aut contemnendum detractare ac deprimere ausit?"-Bridel
- Ethan T. Vishniac, Dept. of Astronomy, The University of Texas at Austin
- Austin, Texas, 78712 ethan@astro.as.utexas.edu
-