First results from SAM-FP: Fabry-Perot observations with ground-layer adaptive optics - the structure and kinematics of the core of 30 Doradus
Claudia Mendes de Oliveira, Philippe Amram, Bruno Quint, Sergio, Torres-Flores, Rodolfo Barba, Denis Andrade

TL;DR
This paper introduces the first data from SAM-FP, a ground-layer adaptive optics Fabry-Perot instrument, revealing detailed ionized gas kinematics and structures in 30 Doradus with high spatial and spectral resolution.
Contribution
It presents the first results from SAM-FP, demonstrating its capability for high-resolution, wide-field kinematic mapping of nebulae, and identifies new dynamic features in 30 Doradus.
Findings
Discovery of a new expanding bubble south of R136
High-resolution kinematic maps of 30 Doradus complexes
SAM-FP data outperform previous spectroscopy in spatial coverage
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to present the first data set obtained with SOAR Adaptive Module-Fabry-Parot (SAM-FP), a Fabry-Perot instrument mounted inside the SOAR telescope Adaptive-Optics Module. This is the only existing imaging Fabry-Perot interferometer using laser-assisted ground-layer adaptive optics. SAM-FP was used to observe the ionized gas, traced by Halpha, in the centre of the 30 Doradus starburst (the Tarantula Nebula) in the Large Magellanic Cloud, with high spatial (~0.6" or 0.15 pc) and spectral (R=11200) resolution. Radial velocity, velocity dispersion and monochromatic maps were derived. The region displays a mix of narrow, sigma ~ 20 km/s profiles and multiple broader profiles with sigma ~ 70-80 km/s, indicating the complex nature of the nebula kinematics. A comparison with previously obtained VLT/FLAMES spectroscopy demonstrates that the data agree well in the regions…
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