Artículo de revista
Primordial helium-3 redux : the helium isotope ratio of the Orion nebula
Fecha
2022Registro en:
The Astrophysical Journal, 932:60 (17pp), 2022
10.3847/1538-4357/ac6503
Autor
Cooke, Ryan J.
Noterdaeme, Pasquier
Johnson, James W.
Pettini, Max
Welsh, Louise
Peroux, Celine
Murphy, Michael T.
Weinberg, David H.
Institución
Resumen
We report the first direct measurement of the helium isotope ratio, He-3/He-4, outside of the Local Interstellar Cloud, as part of science-verification observations with the upgraded CRyogenic InfraRed Echelle Spectrograph. Our determination of He-3/He-4 is based on metastable He I* absorption along the line of sight toward Theta(2)A Ori in the Orion Nebula. We measure a value He-3/He-4 = (1.77 +/- 0.13) x 10(-4) , which is just similar to 40% above the primordial relative abundance of these isotopes, assuming the Standard Model of particle physics and cosmology, (He-3/He-4)(p) = (1.257 +/- 0.017) x 10(-4). We calculate a suite of galactic chemical evolution simulations to study the Galactic build up of these isotopes, using the yields from Limongi & Chieffi for stars in the mass range M = 8-100 M-circle dot and Lagarde et al. for M = 0.8-8 M-circle dot. We find that these simulations simultaneously reproduce the Orion and protosolar He-3/He-4 values if the calculations are initialized with a primordial ratio (He-3/He-4)(p) = (1.043 +/- 0.089) x 10(-4). Even though the quoted error does not include the model uncertainty, this determination agrees with the Standard Model value to within similar to 2 sigma. We also use the present-day Galactic abundance of deuterium (D/H), helium (He/H), and He-3/He-4 to infer an empirical limit on the primordial He-3 abundance, (He-3/H)(p) <= (1.09 +/- 0.18) x 10(-5), which also agrees with the Standard Model value. We point out that it is becoming increasingly difficult to explain the discrepant primordial Li-7/H abundance with nonstandard physics, without breaking the remarkable simultaneous agreement of three primordial element ratios (D/H, He-4/H, and He-3/He-4) with the Standard Model values.