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A&A 489, 1141-1150 (2008)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20079157
Line ratios from shocked cloudlets in planetary nebulae
A. C. Raga1, A. Riera2, 3, G. Mellema4, A. Esquivel1, and P. F. Velázquez11 Instituto de Ciencias Nucleares, UNAM, A. Postal 70-543, 04510 México, México
e-mail: [raga;esquivel;pablo]@nucleares.unam.mx
2 Departament de Física i Enginyeria Nuclear, EUETIB, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Compte d'Urgell 187, 08036 Barcelona, Spain
e-mail: angels.riera@upc.edu
3 Departament d'Astronomia i Meteorologia, Universitat de Barcelona, Av. Diagonal 647, 08028 Barcelona, Spain
4 Stockholm Observatory, AlbaNova University Centre, Stockholm University, 106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
e-mail: garrelt@astro.su.se
Received 27 November 2007 / Accepted 7 April 2008
Abstract
Context. Some PNe and PPNe show compact knots, travelling at high velocities
away from the central sources.
Aims. We compute a number of models from which we obtain
predictions of the emission-line spectrum, which can be compared
with the spectra of the observed knots.
Methods. We completed a series of 11 axisymmetric simulations of an initially
spherical cloudlet, travelling away from a photoionizing source,
into a uniform medium. The simulations included a multi-frequency
transfer of the ionizing radiation, and a 33 species non-equilibrium
ionization network.
Results. From our simulations, we computed emission maps and
spatially-integrated emission-line spectra. The predictions
show a transition from spectra similar to those of shock
wave models (for simulations with lower photoionization rates)
to spectra similar to those of photoionized regions (for
simulations with higher photoionization rates).
Conclusions. The spectra from our photoionized cloudlet models have a range
of line ratios that agree approximately with the observed spectra
when shown in two-line ratio diagnostic diagrams. The predicted
and observed spatial distributions of the emission (with high
ionization lines extending more towards the source than lower
ionization lines) agree in a qualitative way.
Key words: ISM: kinematics and dynamics -- ISM: jets and outflows -- planetary nebulae: general
© ESO 2008
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