2014A&A...568A..14A


Query : 2014A&A...568A..14A

2014A&A...568A..14A - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 568A, 14-14 (2014/8-1)

Ionized gas outflows and global kinematics of low-z luminous star-forming galaxies.

ARRIBAS S., COLINA L., BELLOCCHI E., MAIOLINO R. and VILLAR-MARTIN M.

Abstract (from CDS):

We study the kinematic properties of the ionised gas outflows and ambient interstellar medium (ISM) in a large and representative sample of local luminous and ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (U/LIRGs) (58 systems, 75 galaxies) at galactic and sub-galactic (i.e., star-forming clumps) scales, thanks to integral field spectroscopy (IFS)-based high signal-to-noise integrated spectra. The velocity dispersion of the ionized ISM in U/LIRGs (<σ≳70km/s) is larger than in lower luminosity local star-forming galaxies (<σ≳25km/s). While for isolated disc LIRGs star formation appears to sustain turbulence, gravitational energy release associated with interactions and mergers plays an important role in driving σ in the U/LIRG range. We find that σ has a dependency on the star formation rate density (ΣSFR), which is weaker than expected if it were driven by the energy released by the starburst. The relatively small role of star formation (SF) driving the σ in U/LIRGs is reinforced by the lack of an increase in σ associated with high luminosity SF clumps. We also find that the impact of an active galactic nucleus (AGN) in ULIRGs is strong, increasing on average σ by a factor 1.5. Low-z U/LIRGs cover a range of velocity dispersion (σ∼30 to 100km/s) and star formation rate density (ΣSFR∼0.1 to 20M/yr/kpc2) similar to those of high-z SFGs. Moreover, the observed weak dependency of σ on ΣSFR for local U/LIRGs (σ∝ΣSFR+0.06) is in very good agreement with that measured in some high-z samples. The presence of ionized gas outflows in U/LIRGs seems universal based on the detection of a broad, usually blueshifted, Hα line. The observed dependency of the maximum velocity of the outflow (Vmax) on the star formation rate (SFR) is of the type Vmax(non-AGN)∝SFR(LIR)+0.24. We find that AGNs in U/LIRGs are able to generate faster (∼x2) and more massive (∼x1.4) ionized gas outflows than pure starbursts. The derived ionized mass loading factors (η) are in general below 1, with only a few AGNs above this limit. The escaping gas fraction is low with only less massive (log(Mdyn/M)<10.4) U/LIRGs having outflowing terminal velocities higher than their escape velocities, and more massive galaxies retaining the gas, even if they host an AGN. The observed average outflow properties in U/LIRGs are similar to high-z galaxies of comparable SFR. However, while high-z galaxies seem to require ΣSFR>1M/yr/kpc2 for launching strong outflows, this threshold is not observed in low-z U/LIRGs even after correcting for the differential fraction of the gas content. In the bright SF clumps found in LIRGs, ionized gas outflows appear to be very common (detection rate over 80%). Their observed properties are less extreme than those associated with the entire galaxy. The clumps in LIRGs follow the general size-L-σ scaling relations found for low- and high-z clumps, though they are in general smaller, less luminous, and are characterized by lower σ than at high-z. For a given observed (no internal extinction correction applied) star formation surface density, outflows in LIRG clumps would be about one to two orders of magnitude less energetic than the outflows launched by clumps in high-z SF galaxies.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: ISM - galaxies: kinematics and dynamics - intergalactic medium - galaxies: clusters: general - galaxies: high-redshift

Simbad objects: 69

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

Number of rows : 69
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 MCG-07-03-014 Sy1 01 18 08.370 -44 27 43.29   14.43   13.06   ~ 79 0
2 NGC 633 EmG 01 36 23.418 -37 19 17.64   13.50   12.50   ~ 93 1
3 ESO 297-12 Sy2 01 36 24.1505027520 -37 20 25.708312896   15.06   13.76 14.7 ~ 50 1
4 NGC 1614 Sy1 04 34 00.027 -08 34 44.57   14.66 13.99     ~ 667 0
5 LEDA 17155 Sy2 05 21 01.3994605776 -25 21 45.321827832   15.47 14.75     ~ 498 0
6 LEDA 89499 Sy2 06 02 54.066 -71 03 10.48   15.6       ~ 94 1
7 IRAS 06076-2139 Sy2 06 09 45.7858957392 -21 40 23.614857120   15.64   14.46   ~ 79 0
8 LEDA 89500 Sy2 06 21 01.188 -63 17 23.81   16.70   15.27   ~ 68 1
9 ESO 255-7 EmG 06 27 22.588 -47 10 46.45   14.48   13.60   ~ 67 0
10 2MASX J06301333+3507498 H2G 06 30 13.332 +35 07 49.86           ~ 21 0
11 ESO 557-2 EmG 06 31 47.217 -17 37 17.09   15.03   13.21   ~ 68 0
12 PSCz Q06487+2208 H2G 06 51 45.8 +22 04 27           ~ 32 0
13 IRAS 06592-6313 Sy2 06 59 40.2750782328 -63 17 53.022471360   15.61   14.28   ~ 55 0
14 LEDA 90054 Sy2 07 03 24.2524870728 -60 15 22.448628792   16.02   14.72   ~ 57 1
15 NGC 2369 Sy1 07 16 37.753 -62 20 37.51   13.23   11.56 12.3 ~ 130 0
16 2MASX J08370182-4954302 G 08 37 01.827 -49 54 30.27           ~ 59 0
17 ESO 432-6 AG? 08 44 27.2 -31 41 51   16.4       ~ 33 0
18 LEDA 24922 G 08 52 32.047 -69 01 55.74   16.01   15.17   ~ 40 0
19 NAME IRAS F08572+3915 NW LIN 09 00 25.364 +39 03 54.23     16.66     ~ 420 1
20 2MASX J09041268-3627007 G 09 04 12.689 -36 27 00.76           ~ 85 0
21 IC 563 AG? 09 46 20.361 +03 02 43.86   14.7       ~ 91 0
22 IC 564 rG 09 46 21.0998750808 +03 04 17.078546964   14.1       ~ 97 0
23 NGC 3110 Sy1 10 04 02.0 -06 28 29   13.4   13.3 12.5 ~ 174 3
24 IC 2545 Sy1 10 06 04.581 -33 53 05.55   15.27 14.27 14.25   ~ 111 0
25 NGC 3256 Sy2 10 27 51.284 -43 54 13.55   11.83 11.33 10.62 11.9 ~ 848 2
26 ESO 264-36 Sy2 10 43 07.676 -46 12 44.50   14.34   12.55   ~ 77 0
27 ESO 264-57 AG? 10 59 01.794 -43 26 25.81   15.02   13.22   ~ 70 0
28 LEDA 33083 LIN 10 59 18.128 +24 32 34.74   15.7       ~ 274 1
29 2MASX J11113636+5334587 LIN 11 11 36.3453926088 +53 34 59.562127197           ~ 18 0
30 ESO 319-22 EmG 11 27 54.0785626512 -41 36 52.264754784   14.56   16.21   ~ 63 0
31 IC 694 AG? 11 28 27.312 +58 34 42.29   18.2       ~ 252 2
32 NGC 3690 IG 11 28 31.0 +58 33 41   13.19 12.86     ~ 978 4
33 NAME NGC 3690 West GiP 11 28 31.02 +58 33 40.7   11.8       ~ 629 4
34 ESO 320-30 EmG 11 53 11.722 -39 07 48.72   13.30   11.86   ~ 186 1
35 ESO 440-58 IG 12 06 51.8 -31 56 47   15.44   14.89   ~ 61 0
36 LEDA 39024 LIN 12 13 46.107 +02 48 41.50           ~ 354 1
37 ESO 267-30 Sy1 12 14 12.839 -47 13 43.42   14.20   12.69 12.9 ~ 78 0
38 2MASX J12142211-5632332 G 12 14 22.0958120832 -56 32 33.317528712   16.8       ~ 59 0
39 2MASX J12514092-1025242 G 12 51 40.920 -10 25 24.25           ~ 12 1
40 Mrk 231 Sy1 12 56 14.2341182928 +56 52 25.238373852   14.68 13.84     ~ 1988 3
41 MCG-02-33-098 AG? 13 02 19.5 -15 46 05   14       ~ 89 0
42 ESO 507-70 Sy1 13 02 52.3177169808 -23 55 17.932558692   14.77 14.78 13.24 13.59 ~ 121 0
43 2MASX J13181022+0419292 EmG 13 18 10.2114299688 +04 19 29.367069060           ~ 33 0
44 NGC 5135 Sy2 13 25 44.059 -29 50 01.24   12.58 13.35 11.53 12.2 ~ 474 1
45 IRAS 13342+3932 Sy1 13 36 24.0619427808 +39 17 31.105014396     17.76     ~ 85 0
46 Mrk 273 Sy2 13 44 42.1781 +55 53 12.819   15.68 14.91     ~ 913 3
47 Mrk 463W Sy2 13 56 02.620 +18 22 17.76           ~ 27 0
48 Mrk 463 Sy2 13 56 02.9 +18 22 18   14.8 14.22     ~ 390 2
49 Mrk 463E Sy2 13 56 02.886 +18 22 18.84   15.01 14.22     ~ 152 1
50 LEDA 84113 H2G 14 08 19.0356546744 +29 04 47.143121916           ~ 62 0
51 LEDA 52270 Sy1 14 37 38.2867288488 -15 00 24.087592692   16.58 16.40     ~ 276 1
52 IC 4518 Sy2 14 57 45.6 -43 07 58   14.5       ~ 74 0
53 IRAS 15206+3342 Sy2 15 22 38.104 +33 31 35.90           ~ 101 0
54 2MASX J15265942+3558372 LIN 15 26 59.442 +35 58 37.01   15.61       ~ 272 1
55 IC 4553 SyG 15 34 57.22396 +23 30 11.6084   14.76 13.88     ~ 2961 4
56 2MASX J16023279+3734532 LIN 16 02 32.798 +37 34 53.28           ~ 17 0
57 IRAS 17138-1017 Sy2 17 16 35.83992 -10 20 38.9832   17.43   14.59   ~ 131 0
58 LEDA 60189 LIN 17 23 21.943 -00 17 00.96   15.1       ~ 424 0
59 IC 4686 AG? 18 13 38.7810951072 -57 43 57.306382932   14.67   13.52   ~ 67 1
60 IC 4687 AGN 18 13 39.829 -57 43 31.25   14.35 14.3 12.78   ~ 136 1
61 LEDA 62625 Sy2 18 58 13.813 +65 31 25.04   17.8       ~ 27 0
62 2MASX J21161852-4433374 G 21 16 18.5751072336 -44 33 37.139108652   17.48   16.24   ~ 26 1
63 NGC 7130 Sy2 21 48 19.5412287192 -34 57 04.492024884   12.86 13.87 11.57   ~ 450 0
64 IC 5179 Sy1 22 16 09.1191653256 -36 50 37.117603752   12.29 11.89 11.38   ~ 204 1
65 NAME South America H2G 22 51 49.307 -17 52 23.96   16.97       ~ 327 3
66 [DTD2006] IRAS 23128-5919 N GiP 23 15.7 -59 03           ~ 8 1
67 [DTD2006] IRAS 23128-5919 S GiP 23 15.7 -59 03           ~ 9 1
68 ESO 148-2 Sy2 23 15 46.772 -59 03 15.94   14.94 14.73 13.95   ~ 265 1
69 [CGM90] IRAS 08572+3915 SE GiP ~ ~           ~ 11 0

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:objects in 2014A&A...568A..14A and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu