SDSS IV MaNGA - Spatially resolved diagnostic diagrams: A proof that many galaxies are LIERs
Francesco Belfiore, Roberto Maiolino, Claudia Maraston, Eric Emsellem,, Matthew A. Bershady, Karen L. Masters, Renbin Yan, Dmitry Bizyaev,, M\'ed\'eric Boquien, Joel R. Brownstein, Kevin Bundy, Niv Drory, Timothy M., Heckman, David R. Law, Alexandre Roman-Lopes, Kaike Pan

TL;DR
This study uses SDSS-IV MaNGA data to demonstrate that low ionisation emission-line regions (LIERs) are common across many galaxy types, primarily caused by old stellar populations rather than active nuclei or shocks.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive spatially resolved analysis confirming LIERs are widespread and linked to evolved stars, challenging previous assumptions about their origins.
Findings
LIERs are present in both star-forming and quiescent galaxies.
LIER emission correlates with old stellar populations and diffuse ionised gas.
Shocks are rarely responsible for LIER ionisation, mostly in merging systems.
Abstract
We study the spatially resolved excitation properties of the ionised gas in a sample of 646 galaxies using integral field spectroscopy data from SDSS-IV MaNGA. Making use of Baldwin-Philips-Terlevich diagnostic diagrams we demonstrate the ubiquitous presence of extended (kpc scale) low ionisation emission-line regions (LIERs) in both star forming and quiescent galaxies. In star forming galaxies LIER emission can be associated with diffuse ionised gas, most evident as extra-planar emission in edge-on systems. In addition, we identify two main classes of galaxies displaying LIER emission: `central LIER' (cLIER) galaxies, where central LIER emission is spatially extended, but accompanied by star formation at larger galactocentric distances, and `extended LIER' (eLIER) galaxies, where LIER emission is extended throughout the whole galaxy. In eLIER and cLIER galaxies, LIER emission is…
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