The impact of the warm outflow in the young (GPS) radio source & ULIRG PKS 1345+12 (4C 12.50)
J. Holt (1), C. N. Tadhunter (2), R. Morganti (3,4), B. H. C. Emonts, (5) ((1) Leiden Observatory, Leiden University, (2) University of Sheffield,, (3) ASTRON, (4) Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, Groningen University, (5), CSIRO-ATNF)

TL;DR
This study investigates the impact of nuclear activity on the circumnuclear interstellar medium in the young radio source PKS 1345+12, revealing detailed electron densities, outflow rates, and the limited role of warm outflows in galaxy feedback.
Contribution
Introduces a new technique using transauroral emission lines to accurately measure electron densities in complex emission line regions of active galaxies.
Findings
Measured electron densities for different emission components.
Calculated mass outflow rate of 8 solar masses per year.
Found the warm outflow's kinetic power is a small fraction of the bolometric luminosity.
Abstract
(Abridged) We present new deep VLT/FORS optical spectra with intermediate resolution and large wavelength coverage of the GPS radio source and ULIRG PKS1345+12 (4C12.50; z=0.122), taken with the aim of investigating the impact of the nuclear activity on the circumnuclear ISM. PKS1345+12 is a powerful quasar and is also the best studied case of an emission line outflow in a ULIRG. Using the density sensitive transauroral emission lines [S II]4068,4076 and [O II]7318,7319,7330,7331, we pilot a new technique to accurately model the electron density for cases in which it is not possible to use the traditional diagnostic [S II]6716/6731, namely sources with highly broadened complex emission line profiles and/or high (Ne > 10^4 cm^-3) electron densities. We measure electron densities of Ne=2.94x10^3 cm^-3, Ne=1.47x10^4 cm^-3 and Ne=3.16x10^5 cm^-3 for the regions emitting the narrow, broad…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
