A quantity used in studies of → emission nebulae to convert
the → ionic abundance of a given
chemical element to its total
→ elemental abundance.
The elemental abundance of an element relative to hydrogen is
given by the sum of abundances of all its ions. In practice,
not all the ionization stages are observed.
One must therefore correct for unobserved stages
using ICFs. A common way to do this was to rely on
→ ionization potential considerations. However,
→ photoionization models show that such simple relations do
not necessarily hold. Hence, ICFs based on grids of photoionization models are more reliable.
Nevertheless here also care should be taken for several reasons:
the atomic physics is not well known yet, the ionization structure of a nebula
depends on the spectral energy distribution of the stellar radiation field,
which differs from one model to another, and the density structure of real nebulae
is more complicated than that of idealized models
(see, e.g., Stasińska, 2002, astro-ph/0207500, and references therein).
See also: → ionization; → correction;
→ factor.