The Multiphase Structure and Power Sources of Galactic Winds in Major Mergers
David S. N. Rupke (Rhodes), Sylvain Veilleux (Maryland)

TL;DR
This study investigates the multiphase structure and driving mechanisms of galactic winds in major galaxy mergers, revealing high-velocity bipolar outflows influenced by active galactic nuclei, with implications for star formation regulation.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence of multiphase, high-velocity galactic winds in ULIRGs, highlighting the significant role of QSOs in powering these outflows.
Findings
All galaxies host high-velocity, multiphase outflows.
Obscured QSOs drive the fastest outflows, exceeding 3000 km/s.
Outflows are massive enough to suppress star formation.
Abstract
Massive, galaxy-scale outflows are known to be ubiquitous in major mergers of disk galaxies in the local universe. In this paper, we explore the multiphase structure and power sources of galactic winds in six ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) at z < 0.06 using deep integral field spectroscopy with the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph (GMOS) on Gemini North. We probe the neutral, ionized, and dusty gas phases using Na I D, strong emission lines ([O I], Halpha, and [N II]), and continuum colors, respectively. We separate outflow motions from those due to rotation and tidal perturbations, and find that all of the galaxies in our sample host high-velocity flows on kiloparsec scales. The properties of these outflows are consistent with multiphase (ionized, neutral, and dusty) collimated bipolar winds emerging along the minor axis of the nuclear disk to scales of 1-2 kpc. In two cases,…
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