The Na D profiles of nearby low-power radio sources: Jets powering outflows
M. D. Lehnert, C. Tasse, N. P. H. Nesvadba, P. N. Best, and W. van, Driel

TL;DR
This study investigates Na D absorption in 691 nearby radio galaxies, revealing outflows likely powered by radio jets that influence galaxy evolution through feedback mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale analysis linking Na D absorption features to jet-driven outflows in low-power radio galaxies.
Findings
Approximately one-third show significant Na D excess.
Residual absorption is modestly blueshifted (~50 km/s).
Estimated outflow rates are about 10 solar masses per year.
Abstract
(abridged) We have analyzed the properties of the Na D doublet lines in a large sample of 691 radio galaxies using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). These radio galaxies are resolved in the FIRST survey, have redshifts less that 0.2 and radio flux densities at 1.4 GHz higher than 40 mJy. Approximately 1/3 of the sources show a significant excess (above that contributed by their stellar populations) of Na D absorption that can be robustly fitted with two Voigt profiles representing the Na D doublet. A further 1/6 of the sources show residual absorption, for which the fits were not well constrained though while ~50% of the sample show no significant residual absorption. The residual absorption is modestly blueshifted, typically by ~50 km/s, but the velocity dispersions are high, generally ~500 km/s. Assuming that the size of the absorbing region is consistent with ~1 kpc for dust lanes…
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