SDSS-V LVM: A spatially resolved study of the physical conditions and the chemical abundance discrepancy in the Lagoon Nebula (M 8)
astro-ph.GA
/ Authors
/ Abstract
The abundance discrepancy problem refers to the systematic differences observed between chemical abundances derived from collisionally excited lines (CELs) and recombination lines (RLs) of heavy ions. It remains a major unsolved problem in the study of ionized nebulae and is quantified by the abundance discrepancy factor (ADF). In this work, we present a deep integral field spectroscopic dataset covering the entire Lagoon Nebula (M 8), obtained by the SDSS-V Local Volume Mapper project, at a spatial resolution of 0.21 pc per spaxel. This unique dataset allows us, for the first time, to investigate spatially resolved maps of oxygen RL intensities (O II V1), together with maps of H I RLs, heavy-ion CELs, and dust attenuation across a whole H II region. We map the electron temperature using CELs and RLs of $O^{2+}$, CELs of $N^{+}$, and the electron density using CELs of $S^{+}$. We derive CEL-based ionic and elemental oxygen abundances and, for the first time, a spatially resolved map of the RL-based $O^{2+}$ abundance in an H II region. These measurements enable the construction of the first spatially resolved ADF($O^{2+}$) map of an H II region and yield a global mean ADF of ~0.47 +/- 0.02 dex. Focusing on the central region of M 8, where ionization is dominated by the O-type star Her 36, we find radial variations in the ADF ranging between ~0.35-0.50 dex. Our findings provide novel constraints on the spatial behavior and origin of the abundance discrepancy in H II regions.