ALMA Observations of a Candidate Molecular Outflow in an Obscured Quasar
Ai-Lei Sun, Jenny E. Greene, Nadia L. Zakamska, Nicole P. H. Nesvadba

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to identify a high-velocity molecular outflow in an obscured quasar, suggesting AGN activity drives the outflow, which impacts the galaxy's gas content and evolution.
Contribution
First detailed ALMA CO observations of a molecular outflow in an obscured quasar, revealing its properties and likely AGN-driven origin.
Findings
Molecular outflow rate ~350 Msun/yr
Outflow can deplete gas in ~1 million years
Low star formation rate compared to outflow energy
Abstract
We present Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) CO (1-0) and CO (3-2) observations of SDSS J135646.10+102609.0, an obscured quasar and ultra-luminous infrared galaxy (ULIRG) with two merging nuclei and a known 20-kpc-scale ionized outflow. The total molecular gas mass is M_{mol} ~ 9^{+19}_{-6} x 10^8 Msun, mostly distributed in a compact rotating disk at the primary nucleus (M_{mol} ~ 3 x 10^8 Msun) and an extended tidal arm (M_{mol} ~ 5 x 10^8 Msun). The tidal arm is one of the most massive molecular tidal features known; we suggest that it is due to the lower chance of shock dissociation in this elliptical/disk galaxy merger. In the spatially resolved CO (3-2) data, we find a compact (r ~ 0.3 kpc) high velocity (v ~ 500 km/s) red-shifted feature in addition to the rotation at the N nucleus. We propose a molecular outflow as the most likely explanation for the high…
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