AEGIS: The Nature of the Host Galaxies of Low-ionization Outflows at z < 0.6
Taro Sato, Crystal L. Martin, Kai G. Noeske, David C. Koo, Jennifer M., Lotz

TL;DR
This study investigates low-ionization gas outflows in galaxies at z < 0.6, revealing that outflows are common across different galaxy types and may influence star formation quenching.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic analysis of low-ionization outflows in a broad galaxy sample at intermediate redshift, including red-sequence and early-type galaxies.
Findings
Outflows are more frequent in star-forming galaxies but also present in red, early-type galaxies.
Outflows can persist after star formation has ceased, potentially aiding in quenching.
Evidence of inflows and AGN activity suggests complex gas dynamics in galaxy evolution.
Abstract
We report on a S/N-limited search for low-ionization gas outflows in the spectra of the 0.11 < z < 0.54 objects in the EGS portion of the DEEP2 survey. Doppler shifts from the host galaxy redshifts are systematically searched for in the Na I 5890,96 doublet (Na D). Although the spectral resolution and S/N limit us to study the interstellar gas kinematics from fitting a single doublet component to each observed Na D profile, the typical outflow often seen in local luminous-infrared galaxies (LIRGs) should be detected at >~ 6 sigma in absorption equivalent width down to the survey limiting S/N (~ 5 per pixel) in the continuum around Na D. The detection rate of LIRG-like outflow clearly shows an increasing trend with star-forming activity and infrared luminosity. However, by virtue of not selecting our sample on star formation, we also find a majority of outflows in galaxies on the red…
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