Spectroscopic FIR mapping of the disk and galactic wind of M82 with Herschel-PACS
A. Contursi, A. Poglitsch, J. Graci\'a-Carpio, S. Veilleux, E. Sturm,, J. Fischer, A. Verma, S. Hailey-Dunsheath, D. Lutz, R. Davies, E., Gonz\'alez-Alfonso, A. Sternberg, R. Genzel, L. Tacconi

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel-PACS to map key cooling lines in M82, revealing the physical conditions and kinematic coupling of different gas phases in the galaxy's disk and outflow, and providing insights into the outflow dynamics.
Contribution
It offers high-resolution maps of atomic and ionized gas in M82, demonstrating the coupling of cold molecular and atomic gas with ionized gas in the outflow, and proposes a scenario for cloud entrainment and evaporation.
Findings
Atomic and ionized gas in the outflow have similar velocities (~75 km/s).
Mass of atomic gas in outflow is 5-12x10^7 M_sun, comparable to molecular gas.
Outflow energy and momentum can be explained by energy or momentum-driven models.
Abstract
[Abridged] We present maps of the main cooling lines of the neutral atomic gas ([OI] at 63 and 145 micron and [CII] at 158 micron) and in the [OIII] 88 micron line of the starburst galaxy M82, carried out with the PACS spectrometer on board the Herschel satellite. By applying PDR modeling we derive maps of the main ISM physical parameters, including the [CII] optical depth, at unprecedented spatial resolution (~300 pc). We can clearly kinematically separate the disk from the outflow in all lines. The [CII] and [OI] distributions are consistent with PDR emission both in the disk and in the outflow. Surprisingly, in the outflow, the atomic and the ionized gas traced by the [OIII] line both have a deprojected velocity of ~75 km/s, very similar to the average velocity of the outflowing cold molecular gas (~ 100 km/s) and several times smaller than the outflowing material detected in Halpha…
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.
