Evidence for Ubiquitous Collimated Galactic-Scale Outflows along the Star-Forming Sequence at z~0.5
Kate H. R. Rubin (1), J. Xavier Prochaska (1,2), David C. Koo (2),, Andrew C. Phillips (2), Crystal L. Martin (3), Lucas O. Winstrom (4) ((1), Max-Planck-Institut fuer Astronomie, (2) UCO/Lick Observatory, UC Santa Cruz,, (3) UC Santa Barbara, (4) Cornell)

TL;DR
This study provides evidence that star-forming galaxies at z~0.5 commonly exhibit large-scale, biconical outflows of cool gas, with detection rates influenced by galaxy orientation and properties, impacting galaxy evolution and circumgalactic medium enrichment.
Contribution
It demonstrates that galactic outflows are ubiquitous in star-forming galaxies at z~0.5 and highlights the dependence of outflow detection on galaxy orientation and star formation activity.
Findings
Large-scale winds detected in 66% of galaxies.
Outflow detection strongly depends on galaxy inclination.
Wind velocities are sufficient to escape low-mass halos.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the MgII 2796, 2803 and FeII 2586, 2600 absorption line profiles in individual spectra of 105 galaxies at 0.3<z<1.4. The galaxies, drawn from redshift surveys of the GOODS fields and the Extended Groth Strip, fully sample the range in star formation rates (SFRs) occupied by the star-forming sequence with stellar masses log M_*/M_sun > 9.5 at 0.3<z<0.7. Using the Doppler shifts of the MgII and FeII absorption lines as tracers of cool gas kinematics, we detect large-scale winds in 66+/-5% of the galaxies. HST/ACS imaging and our spectral analysis indicate that the outflow detection rate depends primarily on galaxy orientation: winds are detected in ~89% of galaxies having inclinations (i) <30 degrees (face-on), while the wind detection rate is only ~45% in objects having i>50 degrees (edge-on). Combined with the comparatively weak dependence of the wind detection…
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