Extended Warm Gas in the ULIRG Mrk273: Galactic Outflows and Tidal Debris
Javier Rodriguez Zaurin, Clive N. Tadhunter, David S. N. Rupke,, Sylvain Veilleux, Henrik W. W. Spoon, Marco Chiaberge, Cristina Ramos, Almeida, Dan Batcheldor, William B. Sparks

TL;DR
This study uses new optical imaging and spectroscopy to reveal extended ionised gas structures, tidal debris, and complex nuclear activity in the merging galaxy Mrk273, highlighting AGN-driven ionisation and evidence of multiple nuclei.
Contribution
First detailed imaging and spectroscopic analysis of Mrk273's extended ionised gas and nuclear regions, revealing tidal debris and multiple AGN components.
Findings
Detection of 23 kpc ionised gas filaments as tidal debris
Evidence of multiple AGN nuclei in Mrk273
Kinematic disturbance indicating active galactic processes
Abstract
We present new HST ACS medium- and narrow-band images and long-slit, optical (4000 - 7200A) spectra obtained using the Isaac Newton Telescope (INT) on La Palma, of the merging system Mrk273. The HST observations sample the [OIII]4959,5007 emission from the galaxy and the nearby continuum. The images show that the morphologies of the extended continuum and the ionised gas emission from the galaxy are decoupled, extending almost perpendicular to each other. In particular, we detect for the first time a spectacular structure of ionised gas in the form of filaments extending ~23 kpc to the east of the nuclear region. The quiescent ionised gas kinematics at these locations suggests that these filaments are tidal debris left over from a secondary merger event that are illuminated by an AGN in the nuclear regions. The images also reveal a complex morphology in the nuclear region of the galaxy…
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