The complex jet- and bar-perturbed kinematics in NGC 3393 as revealed with ALMA and GEMINI-GMOS/IFU
Carolina Finlez, Neil M. Nagar, Thaisa Storchi-Bergmann, Allan, Schnorr-M\"uller, Rogemar A. Riffel, Davide Lena, Carole G. Mundell, Martin, S. Elvis

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA and GEMINI-GMOS/IFU observations to analyze the complex gas kinematics in NGC 3393, revealing multiple outflow components and disturbed nuclear regions, but finds no strong evidence for a secondary black hole.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-phase kinematic analysis of NGC 3393, highlighting the impact of jets and bars on gas dynamics, and constrains the presence of a secondary black hole.
Findings
Detection of three ionised gas kinematic components.
Identification of jet-driven and equatorial outflows.
Disturbed molecular gas kinematics in the nuclear region.
Abstract
NGC 3393, a nearby Seyfert 2 galaxy with nuclear radio jets, large-scale and nuclear bars, and a posited secondary super massive black hole, provides an interesting laboratory to test the physics of inflows and outflows. Here we present and analyse the molecular gas (ALMA observations of CO J:2-1 emission over a field of view (FOV) of 45\arcsec \times 45\arcsec, at 0\farcs56 (143 pc) spatial and 5 km/s spectral resolution), ionised gas and stars (GEMINI-GMOS/IFU; over a FOV of 4\arcsec \times 5\arcsec, at 0\farcs62 (159 pc) spatial and 23 km/s spectral resolution) in NGC 3393. The ionised gas emission, detected over the complete GEMINI-GMOS FOV, has three identifiable kinematic components. A narrow (\sigma < 115 km/s) component present in the complete FOV, which is consistent with rotation in the galaxy disk. A broad (\sigma > 115 km/s) redshifted component, detected near the NE and SW…
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