IFU observations of luminous type II AGN - I. Evidence for ubiquitous winds
Rebecca McElroy, Scott M. Croom, Michael Pracy, Rob Sharp, I-Ting Ho,, Anne M. Medling

TL;DR
This study presents evidence that luminous type II AGN ubiquitously drive ionized outflows, with high velocities and shock ionization, impacting their host galaxies' interstellar medium.
Contribution
It provides detailed kinematic and ionization analysis of 17 luminous type II AGN, demonstrating widespread AGN-driven winds and their effects on the surrounding gas.
Findings
High velocity outflows with W80 up to 1600 km/s
Most targets require multiple kinematic components
Strong correlation between ionization ratios and velocity dispersion
Abstract
We present observations of 17 luminous (log(L[O III]/L_Sun) > 8.7) local (z < 0.11) type II AGN. Our aim is to investigate the prevalence and nature of AGN driven outflows in these galaxies by combining kinematic and ionization diagnostic information. We use non-parametric methods (e.g. W80, the width containing 80% of the line flux) to assess the line widths in the central regions of our targets. The maximum values of W80 in each galaxy are in the range 400 - 1600 km/s, with a mean of 790 +- 90 km/s. Such high velocities are strongly suggestive that these AGN are driving ionized outflows. Multi-Gaussian fitting is used to decompose the velocity structure in our galaxies. 14/17 of our targets require 3 separate kinematic components in the ionized gas in their central regions. The broadest components of these fits have FWHM = 530 - 2520 km/s, with a mean value of 920 +- 50 km/s. By…
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