Massive molecular outflows and evidence for AGN feedback from CO observations
Claudia Cicone,Roberto Maiolino,E. Sturm,J. Gracia-Carpio,Chiara Feruglio,Roberto Neri,Susanne Aalto,Ric Davies,Fabrizio Fiore,J. Fischer,Santiago García-Burillo,Eduardo González-Alfonso,S. Hailey-Dunsheath,Enrico Piconcelli,Sylvain Veilleux +14 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the properties of massive, galactic-scale outflows of molecular gas and investigated their impact on galaxy evolution, finding that the presence of an active galactic nucleus (AGN) can boost the outflow rate by a large factor, which is found to increase with the L-AGN/L-bol ratio.
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Abstract: We study the properties of massive, galactic-scale outflows of molecular gas and investigate their impact on galaxy evolution. We present new IRAMPdBI CO(1-0) observations of local ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) and quasar-hosts: a clear signature of massive and energetic molecular outflows, extending on kpc scales, is found in the CO(1-0) kinematics of four out of seven sources, with measured outflow rates of several 100M(circle dot)yr(-1). We combine these new observations with data from the literature, and explore the nature and origin of massive molecular outflows within an extended sample of 19 local galaxies. We find that starburst-dominated galaxies have an outflow rate comparable to their star formation rate (SFR), or even higher by a factor of similar to 2-4, implying that starbursts can indeed be effective in removing cold gas from galaxies. Nevertheless, our results suggest that the presence of an active galactic nucleus (AGN) can boost the outflow rate by a large factor, which is found to increase with the L-AGN/L-bol ratio. The gas depletion time scales due to molecular outflows are anti-correlated with the presence and luminosity of an AGN in these galaxies, and range from a few hundred million years in starburst galaxies down to just a few million years in galaxies hosting powerful AGNs. In quasar hosts, the depletion time scales due to the outflow are much shorter than the depletion time scales due to star formation. We estimate the outflow kinetic power and find that, for galaxies hosting powerful AGNs, it corresponds to about 5% of the AGN luminosity, as expected by models of AGN feedback. Moreover, we find that momentum rates of about 20 L-AGN/c are common among the AGN-dominated sources in our sample. For "pure" starburst galaxies, our data tentatively support models in which outflows are mostly momentum-driven by the radiation pressure from young stars onto dusty clouds. Overall, our results indicate that, although starbursts are effective in powering massive molecular outflows, the presence of an AGN may strongly enhance such outflows, and therefore have a profound feedback effect on the evolution of galaxies by efficiently removing fuel for star formation, hence quenching star formation.
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Citations
Dynamics of dusty radiation-pressure-driven shells and clouds: fast outflows from galaxies, star clusters, massive stars, and AGN
TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown that if the shell or cloud is initially optically-thick to the UV emission from the source of luminosity L, then there is a significant boost in V that reflects the integral of the momentum absorbed as it is accelerated, which can explain the ~1000-2000km/s outflows observed from rapidly star-forming galaxies and active galactic nuclei if the surrounding halo has low gas density.
One-Two Quench: A Double Minor Merger Scenario
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the cessation of star formation in a simulated Milky Way analog, driven by an interaction with two minor satellites, and identified two merger-driven processes, disk disruption and supermassive black hole (SMBH) feedback, which work together to quench L$^*$ galaxies for over 7 Gyr.
Centrally concentrated molecular gas driving galactic-scale ionized gas outflows in star-forming galaxies
L. M. Hogarth,Amélie Saintonge,Luca Cortese,Timothy A. Davis,Scott M. Croom,Joss Bland-Hawthorn,Sarah Brough,Julia J. Bryant,Barbara Catinella,Thomas J. Fletcher,Brent Groves,Brent Groves,Jon Lawrence,Angel R. Lopez-Sanchez,Angel R. Lopez-Sanchez,Matt S. Owers,Samuel N. Richards,Guido Roberts-Borsani,Guido Roberts-Borsani,Edward N. Taylor,J. van de Sande,Nicholas Scott +21 more
TL;DR: In this article, a joint analysis of high spatial resolution molecular gas and star-formation rate maps in main-sequence star-forming galaxies experiencing galactic-scale outflows of ionised gas is performed.
The Complete Ultraviolet Spectrum of the Archetypal "Wind-Dominated" Quasar Mrk~231: Absorption and Emission from a High-Speed Dusty Nuclear Outflow
Sylvain Veilleux,Marcio Melendez,Marcio Melendez,Todd M. Tripp,Fred Hamann,David S. N. Rupke +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, near and far-ultraviolet (NUV and FUV) HST spectra of the nearest quasar known were combined with ground-based optical spectra to study the remarkable dichotomy between the FUV and NUV-optical spectral regions in this object.
Two growing modes and the morphology-quiescence relation in isolated galaxies
Joanna Woo,Sara L. Ellison +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate two possible explanations for the morphology quiescence relation: 1) the central density results from a dissipative core-building event ("compaction") that feeds an AGN that quenches the galaxy and 2) the center density comes from inside-out growth by galaxy-wide star formation that is quenched by processes unrelated to the central densities.
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