4.7 Article

Systematic effects and a new determination of the primordial abundance of 4He and dy/dz from observations of blue compact galaxies

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 602, Issue 1, Pages 200-230

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/380830

Keywords

galaxies : abundances; galaxies : irregular; galaxies : ISM; HII regions; ISM : abundances

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We use spectroscopic observations of a sample of 82 H II regions in 76 blue compact galaxies to determine the primordial helium abundance Y-p and the slope dY/dZ from the Y-O/H linear regression. To improve the accuracy of the dY/dZ measurement, we have included new spectrophotometric observations of 33 H II regions that span a large metallicity range, with oxygen abundance 12 + log (O/H) varying between 7.43 and 8.30 (Z(circle dot)/30less than or equal toZless than or equal toZ(circle dot)/4). Most of the new galaxies were selected from the First Byurakan, the Hamburg/SAO, and the University of Michigan objective prism surveys. For a subsample of seven H II regions, we derive the He mass fraction taking into account known systematic effects, including collisional and fluorescent enhancements of He I emission lines, collisional excitation of hydrogen emission, underlying stellar He I absorption, and the difference between the temperatures T-e(He II) in the He+ zone and T-e(O III) derived from the collisionally excited [O III] lines. We find that the net result of all the systematic effects combined is small, changing the He mass fraction by less than 0.6%. By extrapolating the Y versus O/H linear regression to O/H=0 for seven H II regions of this subsample, we obtain Y-p=0.2421+/-0.0021 and dY/dO=5.7+/-1.8, which corresponds to dY/dZ=3.7+/-1.2, assuming the oxygen mass fraction to be O=0.66Z. In the framework of the standard big bang nucleosynthesis theory, this Y-p corresponds to Omega(b)h(2)=0.012(-0.002)(+0.003), where h is the Hubble constant in units of 100 km s(-1) Mpc(-1). This is smaller at the 2 sigma level than the value obtained from recent deuterium abundance and microwave background radiation measurements. The linear regression slope dY/dO=4.3+/-0.7 (corresponding to dY/dZ=2.8+/-0.5) for the whole sample of 82 H II regions is similar to that derived for the subsample of seven H II regions, although it has a considerably smaller uncertainty.

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