scholarly journals A new determination of the primordial helium abundance using the analyses of H ii region spectra from SDSS

2021 ◽  
Vol 502 (2) ◽  
pp. 3045-3056
Author(s):  
O A Kurichin ◽  
P A Kislitsyn ◽  
V V Klimenko ◽  
S A Balashev ◽  
A V Ivanchik

ABSTRACT The precision measurement of the primordial helium abundance Yp is a powerful probe of the early Universe. The most common way to determine Yp is the analyses of observations of metal-poor H ii regions found in blue compact dwarf galaxies. We present the spectroscopic sample of 100 H ii regions collected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The final analysed sample consists of our sample and HeBCD data base from Izotov et al. (2007). We use a self-consistent procedure to determine physical conditions, current helium abundances, and metallicities of the H ii regions. From a regression to zero metallicity, we have obtained Yp = 0.2462 ± 0.0022, which is one of the most stringent constraints obtained with such methods up to date and is in a good agreement with the Planck result $Y_{\rm p}^{\it {\mathrm{ Planck}}} = 0.2471 \pm 0.0003$. Using the determined value of Yp and the primordial deuterium abundance taken from Particle Data Group (Zyla et al. 2020) we put a constraint on the effective number of neutrino species Neff = 2.95 ± 0.16, which is consistent with the Planck one Neff = 2.99 ± 0.17. Further increase of statistics potentially allows us to achieve Planck accuracy, which in turn will become a powerful tool for studying the self-consistency of the standard cosmological model and/or physics beyond.

2000 ◽  
Vol 198 ◽  
pp. 194-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Peimbert ◽  
Antonio Peimbert

A new determination of the pregalactic helium abundance based on the Magellanic Clouds H II regions is discussed. This determination amounts to Yp = 0.2345 ± 0.0030 and is compared with those derived from giant extragalactic H II regions in systems with extremely low heavy elements content. It is suggested that the higher primordial value derived by other authors from giant H II region complexes could be due to two systematic effects: the presence of neutral hydrogen inside the helium Strömgren sphere and the presence of temperature variations inside the observed volume.


2019 ◽  
Vol 876 (2) ◽  
pp. 98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mabel Valerdi ◽  
Antonio Peimbert ◽  
Manuel Peimbert ◽  
Andrés Sixtos

2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (S268) ◽  
pp. 91-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Peimbert ◽  
A. Peimbert ◽  
L. Carigi ◽  
V. Luridiana

AbstractWe present a review on the determination of the primordial helium abundance Yp, based on the study of hydrogen and helium recombination lines in extragalactic H ii regions. We also discuss the observational determinations of the increase of helium to the increase of oxygen by mass ΔY/ΔO, and compare them with predictions based on models of galactic chemical evolution.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-23
Author(s):  
I. Koshmak ◽  
B. Melekh

The method for the multicomponent photoionization modelling (MPhM) of low-metallicity H II regions surrounding the starburst region was developed. The internal structure of the H II region has been determined using the evolutionary modelling of the superwind bubble surrounding the star-forming region. Models of Chevalier and Clegg (1985) and Weaver et al. (1977) have been used to determine the radial distribution of the gas density, the velocity of gas layers, and the temperature within internal components (the region of the superwind free expansion and the cavity, respectively). The chemical abundances in region of the superwind free expansion were obtained from the evolutionary population synthesis with including of rotating stars. The chemical abundances within cavity were defined by averaging over mass the chemical compositions of mixture of the abundances of gas from superwind and ones within outer component, because of gas evaporation from external component into the cavity. External components of our models describe a high-density, thin shell of gas formed by superwind shock and a typical undisturbed hydrodynamically H II region, respectively. Evolutionary grids of multicomponent low-metallicity models are calculated. A comparative analysis of the results of their calculation with the observed data has been carried out. The ionic abundances averaged over modelling volume as well as chemical composition assumed in models were used to derive the new expressions for ionization-correction factors that were used to redetermine the chemical compositions of 88 H II regions in blue compact dwarf galaxies. It must be noticed that we used for this propose the ionic abundances obtained by Izotov et al. (2007). In result the primordial helium abundance and its enrichment during stellar chemical evolution of matter were determined.


2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (S267) ◽  
pp. 268-268
Author(s):  
Carol E. Thornton ◽  
Aaron J. Barth ◽  
Luis C. Ho ◽  
Jenny E. Greene

The Sloan Digital Sky Survey has made it possible to identify the first samples of active galaxies with estimated black hole masses below ~ 106M⊙. We have obtained Spitzer IRS low-resolution spectra, covering 5–38 μm, of a sample of 41 Seyfert galaxies with low-mass black holes. Our sample includes SDSS-selected objects from the low-mass Seyfert 1 sample of Greene & Ho (2004) and the low-mass Seyfert 2 sample of Barth et al. (2008), as well as NGC 4395 and POX 52. The goals of this work are to examine the dust emission properties of these objects and investigate the relationship between type 1 and type 2 AGNs at low luminosities and low masses, to search for evidence of star formation, and to use emission-line diagnostics to constrain physical conditions within the narrow-line regions. Here we present preliminary results from this project.


2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (S306) ◽  
pp. 351-354
Author(s):  
E. Regős ◽  
A. Szalay ◽  
Z. Rácz ◽  
M. Taghizadeh ◽  
K. Ozogany

AbstractExtreme value statistics (EVS) is applied to the pixelized distribution of galaxy luminosities in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We analyze the DR8 Main Galaxy Sample (MGS) as well as the Luminous Red Galaxy Sample (LRGS). A non-parametric comparison of the EVS of the luminosities with the Fisher-Tippett-Gumbel distribution (limit distribution for independent variables distributed by the Press-Schechter law) indicates a good agreement provided uncertainties arising both from the finite size of the samples and from the sample size distribution are accounted for. This effectively rules out the possibility of having a finite maximum cutoff luminosity.


1989 ◽  
Vol 131 ◽  
pp. 213-213 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walter J. Maciel

Recent work has emphasized the determination of the pregalactic helium abundance by mass Yp and the slope ΔY/ΔZ based on the chemical composition of both galactic and extragalactic H II regions (Pagel, 1987; Pagel et al., 1986).


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