Exploring the making of a galactic wind in the star-bursting dwarf irregular galaxy IC 10 with LOFAR
V. Heesen, D. A. Rafferty, A. Horneffer, R. Beck, A. Basu, J., Westcott, L. Hindson, E. Brinks, K. T. Chy\.zy, A. M. M. Scaife, M., Br\"uggen, G. Heald, A. Fletcher, C. Horellou, F. S. Tabatabaei, R. Paladino,, B. Nikiel-Wroczy\'nski, M. Hoeft, R.-J. Dettmar

TL;DR
This study uses low-frequency radio observations to analyze cosmic-ray transport and galactic wind formation in the starburst dwarf galaxy IC 10, revealing a diffusion-dominated cosmic-ray outflow with implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed cosmic-ray transport modeling of IC 10's radio halo, demonstrating the role of cosmic rays in driving galactic winds in dwarf irregular galaxies.
Findings
Diffusion model best fits the radio halo data.
Cosmic-ray driven wind speeds are close to escape velocity (~50 km/s).
Magnetic fields are in energy equipartition with the interstellar medium.
Abstract
Low-mass galaxies are subject to strong galactic outflows, in which cosmic rays may play an important role, they can be best traced with low-frequency radio continuum observations, which are less affected by spectral ageing. We present a study of the nearby star burst dwarf irregular galaxy IC 10 using observations at 140 MHz with the LOw-Frequency ARray (LOFAR), at 1580 MHz with the Very Large Array (VLA) and at 6200 MHz with the VLA and the 100-m Effelsberg telescope. We find that IC 10 has a low-frequency radio halo, which manifests itself as a second component (thick disc) in the minor axis profiles of the non-thermal radio continuum emission at 140 and 1580 MHz. These profiles are then fitted with 1D cosmic-ray transport models for pure diffusion and advection. We find that a diffusion model fits best, with a diffusion coefficient of -$0.8) \times 10^{26}(E/{\rm…
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