The SAMI Galaxy Survey: extraplanar gas, galactic winds, and their association with star formation history
I-Ting Ho, Anne M. Medling, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Brent Groves, Lisa J., Kewley, Chiaki Kobayashi, Michael A. Dopita, Sarah K. Leslie, Rob Sharp,, James T. Allen, Nathan Bourne, Julia J. Bryant, Luca Cortese, Scott M. Croom,, Loretta Dunne, L. M. R. Fogarty, Michael Goodwin

TL;DR
This study uses integral field spectroscopy to explore how star formation bursts influence the presence of galactic winds and extraplanar gas in edge-on disc galaxies, revealing that recent starburst activity is a key driver.
Contribution
It demonstrates that galactic winds are driven by recent star formation bursts, even at low SFR surface densities, highlighting the importance of time-domain star formation analysis.
Findings
Galaxies with winds show higher SFR surface densities and HδA values.
Galactic winds are driven by recent star formation bursts.
Wind galaxies span a wide range of SFRs and stellar masses.
Abstract
We investigate a sample of 40 local, main-sequence, edge-on disc galaxies using integral field spectroscopy with the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral field spectrograph (SAMI) Galaxy Survey to understand the link between properties of the extraplanar gas and their host galaxies. The kinematics properties of the extraplanar gas, including velocity asymmetries and increased dispersion, are used to differentiate galaxies hosting large-scale galactic winds from those dominated by the extended diffuse ionized gas. We find rather that a spectrum of diffuse gas-dominated to wind dominated galaxies exist. The wind-dominated galaxies span a wide range of star formation rates () across the whole stellar mass range of the sample (). The wind galaxies also span a wide range in SFR…
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