Physical Conditions in the Low-Ionization Component of Starburst Outflows: The Shape of Near-Ultraviolet and Optical Absorption-Line Troughs in Keck Spectra of ULIRGs
Crystal L. Martin (UCSB), Nicolas Bouche (MPE)

TL;DR
This study investigates the physical conditions of low-ionization starburst outflows in ULIRGs using Keck spectra, revealing an accelerating outflow with a decreasing covering factor and providing new constraints on gas density and outflow dynamics.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed analysis of low-ionization outflow conditions in ULIRGs, highlighting the velocity-dependent covering factor and outflow acceleration.
Findings
Outflows are accelerating with decreasing covering factor at higher velocities.
The outflow gas density is constrained to be below 3000 cm³.
The velocity structure indicates a shell of swept-up gas at blowout.
Abstract
We analyze the physical conditions in the low-ionization component of starburst outflows (in contrast to the high-ionization wind fluid observed in X-rays), based on new Keck/LRIS spectroscopy of partially resolved absorption troughs in near-ultraviolet and optical spectra of Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies. The large velocity width and blueshift present in seven, atomic transitions indicate a macroscopic velocity gradient within the outflowing gas. The \mgII 2796, 2803 (and \feII 2587, 2600) doublet lines in these data constrains the gas kinematics better than the heavily blended \nad 5892, 98 doublet. The identical shape of the \mgII 2796 absorption troughs to that of the normally weaker transition at 2803\AA requires both transitions be optically thick at all outflow velocities. The fraction of the galactic continuum covered by the outflow at each velocity therefore dictates the…
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