LBT/ARGOS adaptive optics observations of z$\sim 2$ lensed galaxies
M. Perna, M. Curti, G. Cresci, F. Mannucci, S. Rabien, C. Grillo, S., Belli, M. Bonaglia, L. Busoni, A. Contursi, S. Esposito, I. Georgiev, D., Lutz, G. Orban de Xivry, S. Zibetti, W. Gaessler, T. Mazzoni, J. Borelli, M., Rosensteiner, J. Ziegler, P. Buschkamp, G. Rahmer

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the use of adaptive optics-assisted near-infrared spectroscopy on gravitationally lensed galaxies at z~2, revealing their kinematic, chemical, and outflow properties with high spatial and spectral resolution.
Contribution
First scientific demonstration of AO-assisted multi-object spectroscopy with curved slits on high-z lensed galaxies, enabling detailed physical and dynamical analysis.
Findings
Distinguished between merging and rotating systems.
Derived outflow energetics and mass-loading factors.
Estimated metallicity variations with an upper limit of 0.15 dex.
Abstract
Gravitationally lensed systems allow a detailed view of galaxies at high redshift. High spatial- and spectral-resolution measurements of arc-like structures can offer unique constraints on the physical and dynamical properties of high-z systems. We present near-infrared spectra centred on the gravitational arcs of six known z ~ 2 lensed star-forming galaxies of stellar masses of 10^9-10^11 Msun and star formation rate (SFR) in the range between 10 and 400 Msun/yr. Ground layer adaptive optics (AO)-assisted observations are obtained at the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) with the LUCI spectrographs during the commissioning of the ARGOS facility. We used MOS masks with curved slits to follow the extended arched structures and study the diagnostic emission lines. Combining spatially resolved kinematic properties across the arc-like morphologies, emission line diagnostics and archival…
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