Two-Face(s): ionized and neutral gas winds in the local Universe
A. Concas, P. Popesso, M. Brusa, V. Mainieri, D. Thomas

TL;DR
This study investigates neutral and ionized gas outflows in local galaxies using SDSS spectra, revealing that neutral winds are linked to star formation and ionized winds to AGN activity, with both phases showing limited impact on galaxy gas reservoirs.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of neutral and ionized gas winds in local galaxies, highlighting their different origins and kinematic properties based on galaxy activity and orientation.
Findings
Neutral outflows are prevalent in massive, high-SFR galaxies.
Outflows are mostly perpendicular to galactic disks.
Both wind phases have velocities insufficient to escape the galaxy.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive study of the Na I 5890, 5895 (Na I D) resonant lines in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS, DR7) spectroscopic sample to look for neutral gas outflows in the local galaxies. Individual galaxy spectra are stacked in bins of M and SFR to investigate the dependence of galactic wind occurrence and velocity as a function of the galaxy position in the SFR- plane. In massive galaxies at the high SFR tail we find evidence of a significant blue-shifted Na I D absorption, which we interpret as evidence of neutral outflowing gas. The occurrence of the blue-shifted absorption is observed at the same significance for purely SF galaxies, AGN and composite systems at fixed SFR. In all classes of objects the blue-shift is the largest and the Na I D equivalent width the smallest for face-on galaxies while the absorption feature is at the systemic…
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