Spatially Resolved Far-Ultraviolet Spectroscopy of the Nuclear Region of NGC 1068
W. Zheng, J. Wang, G. A. Kriss, D. Sahnow, M. Allen, M. Dopita, Z., Tsvetanov, and G. Bicknell

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution FUSE spectroscopy to analyze the nuclear region of NGC 1068, revealing complex emission line components, velocity gradients, and low extinction, supporting a biconical outflow model.
Contribution
First spatially resolved FUSE UV spectroscopy of NGC 1068's nucleus, identifying emission line components and velocity structures consistent with a biconical outflow.
Findings
Detection of broad and narrow emission line components.
Velocity gradients indicating radial outflow in the biconical structure.
Low reddening and extinction across the emission cone.
Abstract
We carry out high-resolution FUSE spectroscopy of the nuclear region of NGC 1068. The first set of spectra was obtained with a 30" square aperture that collects all emission from the narrow-line region. The data reveal a strong broad OVI component of FWHM ~3500 kms-1 and two narrow OVI 1031/1037 components of ~350 kms-1. The CIII 977 and NIII 991 emission lines in this spectrum can be fitted with a narrow component of FWHM ~1000 kms-1 and a broad one of ~2500 kms-1. Another set of seven spatially resolved spectra were made using a long slit of 1.25" X 20", at steps of ~1" along the axis of the emission-line cone. We find that (1) Major emission lines in the FUSE wavelength range consist of a broad and a narrow component; (2) There is a gradient in the velocity field for the narrow OVI component of ~200 kms-1 from ~2" southwest of the nucleus to ~4" northeast. A similar pattern is also…
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