SUPER-II: Spatially resolved ionized gas kinematics and scaling relations in z~2 AGN host galaxies
D. Kakkad, V. Mainieri, G. Vietri, S. Carniani, C. M. Harrison, M., Perna, J. Scholtz, C. Circosta, G. Cresci, B. Husemann, M. Bischetti, C., Feruglio, F. Fiore, A. Marconi, P. Padovani, M. Brusa, C. Cicone, A., Comastri, G. Lanzuisi, F. Mannucci, N. Menci, H. Netzer

TL;DR
This study uses AO-assisted SINFONI observations to analyze ionized gas outflows in z~2 AGN, revealing correlations with AGN luminosity, outflow extension up to 6 kpc, and implications for feedback mechanisms.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of ionized gas kinematics and outflow properties in a statistically significant sample of z~2 AGN using adaptive optics.
Findings
All AGN show outflows with velocities 650-2700 km/s.
Outflow extension up to 6 kpc observed in ~35% of the sample.
Strong correlation between outflow velocity and AGN bolometric luminosity.
Abstract
The SINFONI survey for Unveiling the Physics and Effect of Radiative feedback (SUPER) aims at tracing and characterizing ionized gas outflows and their impact on star formation in a statistical sample of X-ray selected Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) at z2. We present the first SINFONI results for a sample of 21 Type-1 AGN spanning a wide range in bolometric luminosity (log = 45.4-47.9 erg/s). The main aims of this paper are determining the extension of the ionized gas, characterizing the occurrence of AGN-driven outflows, and linking the properties of such outflows with those of the AGN. We use Adaptive Optics-assisted SINFONI observations to trace ionized gas in the extended narrow line region using the [OIII]5007 line. We classify a target as hosting an outflow if its non-parametric velocity of the [OIII] line, , is larger than 600 km/s. We…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
