Quantifying Feedback from Narrow Line Region Outflows in Nearby Active Galaxies. III. Results for the Seyfert 2 Galaxies Markarian 3, Markarian 78, and NGC 1068
Mitchell Revalski, Beena Meena, Francisco Martinez, Garrett E. Polack,, D. Michael Crenshaw, Steven B. Kraemer, Nicholas R. Collins, Travis C., Fischer, Henrique R. Schmitt, Judy Schmidt, W. Peter Maksym, Marc Rafelski

TL;DR
This study measures the properties of ionized gas outflows in nearby active galaxies using spatially-resolved spectroscopy, revealing their mass, velocity, and energy, and emphasizing the importance of spatial resolution for understanding AGN feedback.
Contribution
It expands previous analysis by including three additional Seyfert 2 galaxies, providing detailed measurements of outflow energetics and their correlation with AGN luminosity.
Findings
Outflows contain $10^{5.5}$ to $10^{7.5}$ solar masses of ionized gas.
Maximum velocities reach 800 to 2000 km/s.
Outflow rates of 3 to 12 solar masses per year.
Abstract
Outflows of ionized gas driven by active galactic nuclei (AGN) may significantly impact the evolution of their host galaxies. However, determining the energetics of these outflows is difficult with spatially unresolved observations that are subject to strong global selection effects. We present part of an ongoing study using Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and Apache Point Observatory (APO) spectroscopy and imaging to derive spatially-resolved mass outflow rates and energetics for narrow line region (NLR) outflows in nearby AGN that are based on multi-component photoionization models to account for spatial variations in the gas ionization, density, abundances, and dust content. This expanded analysis adds Mrk 3, Mrk 78, and NGC 1068, doubling the sample in Revalski (2019). We find that the outflows contain total ionized gas masses of and reach…
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.
