INVESTIGADORES
HÄGELE Guillermo Federico
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Properties of the ionised gas of circumnuclear star-forming regions in early-type spirals
Autor/es:
DÍAZ, A. I.; TERLEVICH, E.; HÄGELE, G. F.; CASTELLANOS, M.
Lugar:
Granada
Reunión:
Workshop; Young massive star clusters: Initial conditions and environments; 2007
Institución organizadora:
Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía
Resumen:
A study of circumnuclear star-forming regions (CNSFRs) in several early-type spirals has been carried out in order to investigate their main properties: stellar and gas kinematics, dynamical masses, ionising stellar masses, chemical abundances and other properties of the ionised gas. Both high resolution ( R˜20,000) and moderate resolution ( R˜5000) have been used. In some cases, these regions (about 100-150 pc in size) are composed of several individual star clusters with sizes between 1.5 and 4.9 pc, estimated from Hubble Space Telescope images. Stellar and gas velocity dispersions are found to differ by about 20 to 30 km s-1, with the H β emission lines being narrower than both the stellar lines and the [O iii] λ5007 Å lines. The twice ionised oxygen, on the other hand, shows velocity dispersions comparable to those of stars. We have applied the virial theorem to estimate dynamical masses of the clusters, assuming that the systems are gravitationally bounded and spherically symmetric, and using previously measured sizes. The measured values of the stellar velocity dispersions yield dynamical masses of the order of 107 to 108 Msun for the full CNSFRs. We obtain oxygen abundances which are comparable to those found in high-metallicity disc H ii regions from direct measurements of electron temperatures and consistent with solar values within the errors. The region with the highest oxygen abundance is R3+R4 in NGC3504, 12+log(O/H)=8.85, about 1.5 times solar. The derived N/O ratios are, on average, larger than those found in high-metallicity disc H ii regions, and they do not seem to follow the trend of N/O vs. O/H which marks the secondary behaviour of nitrogen. On the other hand, the S/O ratios span a very narrow range—between 0.6 and 0.8 times solar. Compared to high-metallicity disc H ii regions, CNSFRs show values of the O23 and the N2 parameters whose distributions are shifted to lower and higher values, respectively. Hence, even though their derived oxygen and sulphur abundances are similar, higher values would in principle be obtained for the CNSFRs if pure empirical methods were used to estimate abundances. CNSFRs also exhibit lower ionisation parameters than their disc counterparts, as derived from [S ii]/[S iii]. Their ionisation structure also seems to be different, with CNSFRs showing radiation-field properties more similar to H ii galaxies than to disc high-metallicity H ii regions.