# Survival of molecular gas in a stellar feedback-driven outflow witnessed   with the MUSE TIMER project and ALMA

**Authors:** Ryan Leaman, Francesca Fragkoudi, Miguel Querejeta, Gigi Y.C. Leung,, Dimitri A. Gadotti, Bernd Husemann, Jesus Falcon-Barroso, Patricia, Sanchez-Blazquez, Glenn van de Ven, Taehyun Kim, Paula Coelho, Mariya, Lyubenova, Adriana de Lorenzo-Caceres, Marie Martig, Inma Martinez-Valpuesta,, Justus Neumann, Isabel Perez, Marja Seidel

arXiv: 1907.13142 · 2019-08-07

## TL;DR

This study investigates how molecular gas survives in a stellar feedback-driven outflow in galaxy NGC 3351, combining observations and models to understand feedback mechanisms and cold gas survival.

## Contribution

It provides observational evidence and modeling insights into the survival of molecular gas in outflows driven by stellar feedback, highlighting magnetic fields' role.

## Key findings

- Stellar feedback can drive bulk gas motions comparable to low-luminosity AGN.
- Less than 0.1% of ionized gas escapes the galaxy.
- Magnetic fields likely aid in cold gas survival during outflow launch.

## Abstract

Stellar feedback plays a significant role in modulating star formation, redistributing metals, and shaping the baryonic and dark structure of galaxies -- however, the efficiency of its energy deposition to the interstellar medium is challenging to constrain observationally. Here we leverage HST and ALMA imaging of a molecular gas and dust shell ($M_{H2} \sim 2\times 10^{5} ~{\rm M}_{\odot}$) in an outflow from the nuclear star forming ring of the galaxy NGC 3351, to serve as a boundary condition for a dynamical and energetic analysis of the outflowing ionised gas seen in our MUSE TIMER survey. We use \texttt{STARBURST99} models and prescriptions for feedback from simulations to demonstrate that the observed star formation energetics can reproduce the ionised and molecular gas dynamics -- provided a dominant component of the momentum injection comes from direct photon pressure from young stars, on top of supernovae, photoionisation heating and stellar winds. The mechanical energy budget from these sources is comparable to low luminosity AGN, suggesting that stellar feedback can be a relevant driver of bulk gas motions in galaxy centres - although here $\lesssim 10^{-3}$ of the ionized gas mass is escaping the galaxy. We test several scenarios for the survival/formation of the cold gas in the outflow, including in-situ condensation and cooling. Interestingly, the geometry of the molecular gas shell, observed magnetic field strengths and emission line diagnostics are consistent with a scenario where magnetic field lines aided survival of the dusty ISM as it was initially launched (with mass loading factor $\lesssim 1$) from the ring by stellar feedback. This system's unique feedback driven morphology can hopefully serve as a useful litmus test for feedback prescriptions in magnetohydrodynamical galaxy simulations.

## Full text

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## Figures

17 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.13142/full.md

## References

124 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.13142/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.13142