Ionized Gas Motions and the Structure of Feedback Near a Forming Globular Cluster in NGC 5253
Daniel P. Cohen, Jean L. Turner, S. Michelle Consiglio, Emily C., Martin, Sara C. Beck

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution infrared observations to analyze ionized gas motions and feedback processes in a forming globular cluster in NGC 5253, revealing localized winds and limited feedback effects.
Contribution
It provides detailed kinematic analysis of the supernebula, showing that feedback is currently ineffective at dispersing gas in the forming cluster.
Findings
Brackett α emission shows narrow linewidths similar to Galactic ultra-compact HII regions.
Detection of a broad component suggests high-velocity winds from some sources.
No large-scale outflow indicates feedback is insufficient to disperse gas, allowing ongoing star formation.
Abstract
We observed Brackett 4.05m emission towards the supernebula in NGC 5253 with NIRSPEC on Keck II in adaptive optics mode, NIRSPAO, to probe feedback from its exciting embedded super star cluster (SSC). NIRSPEC's Slit-Viewing Camera was simultaneously used to image the K-band continuum at resolution. We register the IR continuum with HST imaging, and find that the visible clusters are offset from the K-band peak, which coincides with the Br peak of the supernebula and its associated molecular cloud. The spectra of the supernebula exhibit Br emission with a strong, narrow core. The linewidths are 65-76 km s, FWHM, comparable to those around individual ultra-compact HII regions within our Galaxy. A weak, broad (FWHM150-175 km s) component is detected on the base of the line, which could trace a population of sources with…
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