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We have compared Monte Carlo photoionization models of H II regions with a uniform density distribution with models with the same central stars and chemical compositions but with 3-D hierarchical clumps. We compare the abundances of He, N, O, Ne, and S obtained from emission line strengths and [O III] and [N II] temperatures to those in our models. We consider stellar temperatures in the range 37.5 -- 45kK and ionizing luminosities from 10^{48} to 10^{51} photons/s. Clumped models have different ionic abundances than uniform. For hot stars, He^0/He^+ is 2 -- 3%, much larger than with uniform models. This amount of He I is independent of metallicity and so impacts the determination of the primordial abundance of He. The total abundances of O, Ne, and S obtained by the usual methods of analysis, using T([OIII) for high stages of ionization and T([NII]) for low, are about as accurate for clumped models as for uniform and within about 20% of the true values. If T([OIII]) is used for analyzing all ions, the derived (O/H) is 40 to 60% too large for cool stars but is good for hot stars. Uniform models have similar errors, so the clumping does not change the accuracy of abundance analysis. The physical causes of the ionic abundance errors are present in real nebulae. In clumped models, helium ionizing radiation from zones of high ionization (low He^0 and low UV opacity) can penetrate nearby regions near the edge of the ionized zone. This effect allows He^0 to absorb more stellar photons than in uniform or radially symmetrical geometries. In turn, these absorptions compete with O+, etc., for those energetic stellar photons.
We present the results of low dispersion optical spectroscopy of 186 H II regions spanning a range of radius in 13 spiral galaxies. Abundances for several elements (oxygen, nitrogen, neon, sulfur, and argon) were determined for 185 of the H II region
We present a theoretical investigation of the effect of multiple ionisation sources in HII regions on the total elemental abundances derived from the analysis of collisionally excited emission lines. We focus on empirical methods based on direct temp
We study the presence of low intensity high velocity components, which we have termed wing features in the integrated Halpha emission line profiles of the HII region populations of the spiral barred galaxies NGC 1530, NGC 3359 and NGC 6951. We find t
We use very deep spectra obtained with the Ultraviolet-Visual Echelle Spectrograph in the Very Large Telescope in order to determine the physical conditions, the chemical abundances and the iron depletion factors of four H II regions of the Large Mag
Medium-resolution spectra from 3650 angstroms to 10,000 angstroms are presented for 96 giant H II regions distributed in 20 spiral galaxies. We have calculated two separate grids of photoionization models, adopting single-star atmospheres (Kurucz) an