Bibcode
DOI
Mesa-Delgado, Adal; Esteban, César; García-Rojas, Jorge
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 685, Issue 1, pp. 679-679.
Advertised on:
9
2008
Journal
Citations
1
Refereed citations
1
Description
In Table 1 of our original paper we include the coordinates of the
centers of the 3.7' long slits obtained in the observations. However,
these do not correspond to the centers of the slits drawn in our Figure
1, which represents the extension of the portions of the slits that we
finally analyze in the paper (we remove some sections, as indicated in
Table 2). The central coordinates of these ``effective'' slits are given
in Table E1 below.
In § 3 we indicate that the values of the reddening coefficient we
obtain are somewhat low, lower than the values found in most of the
literature (e.g. Esteban et al.1998 ApJ, 675, 389 [2008]; O'Dell &
Yusef-Zadeh 2000 ApJ, 675, 389
[2008]), but we do not discuss this fact in the paper. In
particular, we find that our c(Hβ) values are in some regions about
0.3 or 0.4 dex lower than those found by O'Dell & Yusef-Zadeh for
the same areas. We have investigated the reason of that discrepancy, and
find that the data do not apparently suffer for flux calibration
problems. The method we used involved measuring the Hβ and Hγ
flux ratios and comparing them with the theoretically expected values.
This method demands very precise spectrophotometry, because one is using
observations over a short wavelength base to determine reddening
corrections over a much longer wavelength range. We have not found any
error in our analysis, and hence cannot explain the differences in the
extinction when compared with earlier results. However, the results of
our paper are not particularly sensitive to the reddening correction.
We have calculated the effect on the T([N II]) and T([O III])
distributions of increasing the c(Hβ) by a constant value (0.3 and
0.7 dex) in all our slit positions, and the changes are not relevant for
our conclusions. Obviously, the density maps are largely unaffected. In
the case of an increment of 0.3 dex in c(Hβ), the temperatures
change somewhat-about 100 K in T([N II]), and considerably less for T([O
III])-for a given point, but the point-to-point variations are
identical. The spatial behavior the abundance discrepancy factor, the
main concern of the paper, is also not substantially affected, and its
variation remains within the observational errors.
We are very grateful to C. R. O'Dell for his careful reading of our
paper and for indicating the points discussed and corrected here, as
well as the anonymous referee of this erratum.