Outflow or galactic wind: The fate of ionized gas in the halos of dwarf galaxies
J. van Eymeren, D. J. Bomans, K. Weis, R.-J. Dettmar

TL;DR
This study investigates whether ionized gas structures in dwarf galaxy halos are gravitationally bound or can escape as galactic winds, using deep H-alpha imaging and kinematic analysis, concluding all observed gas remains bound.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed kinematic data and modeling showing that ionized gas in dwarf galaxy halos does not escape, offering insights into galaxy evolution and feedback processes.
Findings
Ionized gas structures are detected up to 2 kpc in size.
Outflow velocities range from 20 to 110 km/s.
All gas features are gravitationally bound to their host galaxies.
Abstract
Context: H\alpha images of star bursting irregular galaxies reveal a large amount of extended ionized gas structures, in some cases at kpc-distance away from any place of current star forming activity. A kinematic analysis of especially the faint structures in the halo of dwarf galaxies allows insights into the properties and the origin of this gas component. This is important for the chemical evolution of galaxies, the enrichment of the intergalactic medium, and for the understanding of the formation of galaxies in the early universe. Aims: We want to investigate whether the ionized gas detected in two irregular dwarf galaxies (NGC 2366 and NGC 4861) stays gravitationally bound to the host galaxy or can escape from it by becoming a freely flowing wind. Methods: Very deep H\alpha images of NGC 2366 and NGC 4861 were obtained to detect and catalog both small and large scale ionized…
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