Compact Starburst Galaxies with Fast Outflows: Central Escape Velocities and Stellar Mass Surface Densities from Multi-band Hubble Space Telescope Imaging
Aleksandar M. Diamond-Stanic, John Moustakas, Paul H. Sell, Christy A., Tremonti, Alison L. Coil, Julie D. Davis, James E. Geach, Sophia C. W., Gottlieb, Ryan C. Hickox, Amanda Kepley, Charles Lipscomb, Joshua Rines,, Gregory H. Rudnick, Cristopher Thompson, Kingdell Valdez

TL;DR
This study uses multi-band Hubble imaging to analyze 12 compact starburst galaxies at z=0.4-0.8, revealing their central escape velocities, stellar densities, and implications for galaxy evolution and outflow mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of central escape velocities and stellar densities in compact starburst galaxies, linking observations to galaxy evolution theories.
Findings
Central escape velocities are about 900 km/s, lower than outflow speeds.
Central stellar densities are comparable to the Eddington limit.
Galaxies are likely progenitors of local power-law ellipticals.
Abstract
We present multi-band Hubble Space Telescope imaging that spans rest-frame near-ultraviolet through near-infrared wavelengths (0.3-1.1 m) for 12 compact starburst galaxies at z=0.4-0.8. These massive galaxies (M_stellar ~ 10^11 M_Sun) are driving very fast outflows (=1000-3000 km/s), and their light profiles are dominated by an extremely compact starburst component (half-light radius ~ 100 pc). Our goal is to constrain the physical mechanisms responsible for launching these fast outflows by measuring the physical conditions within the central kiloparsec. Based on our stellar population analysis, the central component typically contributes 25% of the total stellar mass and the central escape velocities km/s are a factor of two smaller than the observed outflow velocities. This requires physical mechanisms that can accelerate gas to…
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