NGC6240: extended CO structures and their association with shocked gas
C. Feruglio, F. Fiore, R. Maiolino, E. Piconcelli, H. Aussel, D., Elbaz, E. Le Floc'h, E. Sturm, R. Davies, C. Cicone

TL;DR
This study presents detailed CO observations of NGC6240, revealing extended, disturbed molecular gas structures associated with galaxy interactions and shocks, likely driven by active galactic nuclei outflows.
Contribution
First detailed CO mapping of NGC6240 showing extended structures and their link to shocked gas and galaxy interactions, highlighting AGN-driven outflows.
Findings
Extended blue- and redshifted CO structures up to 7 kpc.
Evidence of shocked gas associated with Halpha and X-ray emission.
Molecular gas affected by galaxy interactions and outflows.
Abstract
We present deep CO observations of NGC6240 performed with the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer (PdBI). NGC6240 is the prototypical example of a major galaxy merger in progress, caught at an early stage, with an extended, strongly-disturbed butterfly-like morphology and the presence of a heavily obscured active nucleus in the core of each progenitor galaxy. The CO line shows a skewed profile with very broad and asymmetric wings detected out to velocities of -600 km/s and +800 km/s with respect to the systemic velocity. The PdBI maps reveal the existence of two prominent structures of blueshifted CO emission. One extends eastward, i.e. approximately perpendicular to the line connecting the galactic nuclei, over scales of ~7 kpc and shows velocities up to -400 km/s. The other extends southwestward out to ~7 kpc from the nuclear region, and has a velocity of -100 km/s with respect to the…
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