Outflow of hot and cold molecular gas from the obscured secondary nucleus of NGC3256: closing in on feedback physics
Bjorn Emonts (1), Javier Piqueras-Lopez (1), Luis Colina (1), Santiago, Arribas (1), Montserrat Villar-Martin (1), Miguel Pereira-Santaella (1,2),, Santiago Garcia-Burillo (3), Almudena Alonso-Herrero (4) ((1) CSIC-INTA, Centro de Astrobiologia Madrid, (2) INAF Roma

TL;DR
This study spatially resolves a high-velocity molecular outflow in NGC3256's obscured nucleus, revealing its morphology, kinematics, and heating mechanisms, and linking it to feedback processes from starburst or AGN activity.
Contribution
First spatially resolved imaging of both hot and cold molecular outflows in NGC3256, elucidating their morphology, velocity, and heating mechanisms in a merging galaxy nucleus.
Findings
Detected a biconical hot molecular outflow with ~1800 km/s velocity.
Hot and cold molecular gases share similar morphology and kinematics.
Outflow driven likely by a hidden AGN or nuclear starburst.
Abstract
The nuclei of merging galaxies are often deeply buried in dense layers of gas and dust. In these regions, gas outflows driven by starburst and AGN activity are believed to play a crucial role in the evolution of these galaxies. However, to fully understand this process it is essential to resolve the morphology and kinematics of such outflows. Using near-IR integral-field spectroscopy obtained with VLT/SINFONI, we detect a kpc-scale structure of high-velocity molecular hydrogen (H2) gas associated with the deeply buried secondary nucleus of the IR-luminous merger NGC3256. We show that this structure is likely the hot component of a molecular outflow, which is detected also in the cold molecular gas by Sakamoto et al. This outflow, with a molecular gas mass of M(H2)~2x10^7 Msun, is among the first to be spatially resolved in both the hot H2 gas with VLT/SINFONI and the cold CO-emitting…
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