SDSS-IV MaNGA: Refining Strong Line Diagnostic Classifications Using Spatially Resolved Gas Dynamics
David R. Law, Xihan Ji, Francesco Belfiore, Matthew A. Bershady,, Michele Cappellari, Kyle B. Westfall, Renbin Yan, Dmitry Bizyaev, Joel R., Brownstein, Niv Drory, Brett H. Andrews

TL;DR
This study uses MaNGA integral-field spectroscopy to refine galaxy gas ionization classifications by linking emission line ratios with gas dynamics, improving the accuracy of traditional diagnostic boundaries.
Contribution
It introduces a new method that incorporates gas velocity dispersion and stellar properties to better distinguish ionization sources in galaxies.
Findings
Gas velocity dispersion correlates with emission line ratios.
Different ionization sources show distinct dynamical and stellar properties.
Revised diagnostic boundaries improve classification accuracy.
Abstract
We use the statistical power of the MaNGA integral-field spectroscopic galaxy survey to improve the definition of strong line diagnostic boundaries used to classify gas ionization properties in galaxies. We detect line emission from 3.6 million spaxels distributed across 7400 individual galaxies spanning a wide range of stellar masses, star formation rates, and morphological types, and find that the gas-phase velocity dispersion sigma_HAlpha correlates strongly with traditional optical emission line ratios such as [S II]/HAlpha, [N II]/HAlpha, [O I]/HAlpha, and [O III]/HBeta. Spaxels whose line ratios are most consistent with ionization by galactic HII regions exhibit a narrow range of dynamically cold line of sight velocity distributions (LOSVDs) peaked around 25 km/s corresponding to a galactic thin disk, while those consistent with ionization by active galactic nuclei (AGN) and…
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