The properties of the extended warm ionised gas around low-redshift QSOs and the lack of extended high-velocity outflows
B. Husemann (1), L. Wisotzki (1), S. F. S\'anchez (2, 3), K. Jahnke, (4) ((1) Leibniz-Institut f\"ur Astrophysik Potsdam, (2) Instituto de, Astrof\'isica de Andaluc\'ia, (3) Centro Astron\'omico Hispano Alem\'an de, Calar Alto, (4) Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Astronomie)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the properties of extended ionised gas around low-redshift QSOs, revealing that most EELRs are ionised by the QSO, are larger than previously measured, and exhibit mostly quiescent kinematics with few high-velocity outflows.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of ENLR sizes with QSO luminosity and shows the significance of radio jets in shaping EELRs in radio-quiet QSOs.
Findings
EELRs detected around 61% of QSOs
ENLR sizes correlate strongly with QSO continuum luminosity
Most ionised gas exhibits quiescent, gravitationally driven kinematics
Abstract
(Abridged) We present a detailed analysis of a large sample of 31 low-redshift, mostly radio-quiet type 1 QSOs observed with integral field spectroscopy to study their extended emission-line regions (EELRs). We focus on the ionisation state of the gas, size and luminosity of extended narrow line regions (ENLRs), which corresponds to those parts of the EELR dominated by ionisation from the QSO, as well as the kinematics of the ionised gas. We detect EELRs around 19 of our 31 QSOs (61%) after deblending the unresolved QSO emission and the extended host galaxy light in the integral field data. We identify 13 EELRs to be entirely ionised by the QSO radiation, 3 EELRs are composed of HII regions and 3 EELRs display signatures of both ionisation mechanisms at different locations. The typical size of the ENLR is 10kpc at a median nuclear [OIII] luminosity of log(L([OIII])/[erg/s])=42.7+-0.15.…
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.
