High-velocity extended molecular outflow in the star-formation dominated luminous infrared galaxy ESO 320-G030
M. Pereira-Santaella, L. Colina, S. Garc\'ia-Burillo, A., Alonso-Herrero, S. Arribas, S. Cazzoli, B. Emonts, J. Piqueras L\'opez, P., Planesas, T. Storchi Bergmann, A. Usero, M. Villar-Mart\'in

TL;DR
This study presents high-resolution ALMA observations revealing a massive, high-velocity molecular outflow in the galaxy ESO 320-G030, driven by star formation and characterized by a clumpy cold gas structure with limited feedback impact.
Contribution
First detailed spatially resolved analysis of a star-formation driven molecular outflow in a luminous infrared galaxy using multi-wavelength data.
Findings
Detected a ~450 km/s molecular outflow with a size of ~2.5 kpc.
Outflow mass rate estimated between 2-8 Msun/yr.
Clumpy cold molecular gas with decreasing mass and constant velocity outward.
Abstract
We analyze new high spatial resolution (~60 pc) ALMA CO(2-1) observations of the isolated luminous infrared galaxy ESO 320-G030 (d=48 Mpc) in combination with ancillary HST optical and near-IR imaging as well as VLT/SINFONI near-IR integral field spectroscopy. We detect a high-velocity (~450 km/s) spatially resolved (size~2.5 kpc; dynamical time ~3 Myr) massive (~10^7 Msun; mass rate~2-8 Msun/yr) molecular outflow originated in the central ~250 pc. We observe a clumpy structure in the outflowing cold molecular gas with clump sizes between 60 and 150 pc and masses between 10^5.5 and 10^6.4 Msun. The mass of the clumps decreases with increasing distance, while the velocity is approximately constant. Therefore, both the momentum and kinetic energy of the clumps decrease outwards. In the innermost (~100 pc) part of the outflow, we measure a hot-to-cold molecular gas ratio of 7x10^-5, which…
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