Molecular Superbubbles and Outflows from Starburst Galaxy NGC 2146
An-Li Tsai, Satoki Matsushita, Kouichiro Nakanishi, Kotaro Kohno,, Ryohei Kawabe, Tatsuya Inui, Hironori Matsumoto, Takeshi G. Tsuru, Alison B., Peck, and Andrea Tarchi

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution CO observations to identify and analyze molecular superbubbles and outflows in NGC 2146, revealing their sizes, velocities, and interactions with hot plasma and X-ray emissions.
Contribution
First detailed detection and characterization of multiple molecular superbubbles and outflows in NGC 2146 using interferometric CO data.
Findings
Detected two diffuse molecular superbubbles and one outflow.
Molecular outflow extends ~2 kpc with velocities up to 200 km/s.
Hot plasma likely drives the molecular outflow.
Abstract
We present results from a deep (1 sigma = 5.7 mJy beam^{-1} per 20.8 km s^{-1} velocity channel) ^{12}CO(1-0) interferometric observation of the central 60" region of the nearby edge-on starburst galaxy NGC 2146 observed with the Nobeyama Millimeter Array (NMA). Two diffuse expanding molecular superbubbles and one molecular outflow are successfully detected. One molecular superbubble, with a size of ~1 kpc and an expansion velocity of ~50 km s^{-1}, is located below the galactic disk; a second molecular superbubble, this time with a size of ~700 pc and an expansion velocity of ~35 km s^{-1}, is also seen in the position-velocity diagram; the molecular outflow is located above the galactic disk with an extent ~2 kpc, expanding with a velocity of up to ~200 km s^{-1}. The molecular outflow has an arc-like structure, and is located at the front edge of the soft X-ray outflow. In addition,…
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