AGN-driven outflows in the OH absorber galaxy IRAS 19154+2704
View/ Open
Date
2024Author
Type
Subject
Abstract
We present a two-dimensional study of the gas distribution, excitation, and kinematics of the OH absorber galaxy IRAS 19154+2704 using Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph integral field unit observations. Its continuum image shows a disturbed morphology indicative of a past or ongoing interaction. The ionized gas emission presents two kinematic components: a narrow (σ 300 km s−1) component that may be tracing the gas orbiting in the galaxy potential and a broad (σ 500 km s−1) component, which is p ...
We present a two-dimensional study of the gas distribution, excitation, and kinematics of the OH absorber galaxy IRAS 19154+2704 using Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph integral field unit observations. Its continuum image shows a disturbed morphology indicative of a past or ongoing interaction. The ionized gas emission presents two kinematic components: a narrow (σ 300 km s−1) component that may be tracing the gas orbiting in the galaxy potential and a broad (σ 500 km s−1) component, which is produced by an active galactic nucleus (AGN)-driven outflow, with velocities reaching −500 km s−1, which may exceed the escape velocity of the galaxy. The emission-line ratios and Baldwin–Phillips–Terlevich diagrams confirm that the gas excitation in the inner ∼2 kpc is mainly due to the AGN, while in regions farther away, a contribution from star formation is observed. We estimate a mass-outflow rate of M˙ out = 4.0 ± 2.6 M yr−1 at a distance of 850 pc from the nucleus. The corresponding outflow kinetic power, E˙out = (2.5 ± 1.6) × 1042 erg s−1, is only 3 × 10−4 Lbol (the AGN luminosity), but the large mass-outflow rate, if kept for an ∼10 Myr AGN life cycle, will expel ≈108 M in ionized gas alone. This is the sixth of a series of papers in which we have investigated the kinematics of ultra-luminous infrared galaxies, most of which are interacting galaxies showing OH megamasers. IRAS 19154 shows the strongest signatures of an active AGN, supporting an evolutionary scenario: interactions trigger AGN that fully appears in the most advanced stages of the interaction. ...
In
Monthly notices of the royal astronomical society. Oxford. Vol. 527, no. 4 (Feb. 2024), p. 10844–10854
Source
Foreign
Collections
-
Journal Articles (42706)Exact and Earth Sciences (6359)
This item is licensed under a Creative Commons License
