Evidence of wind signatures in the gas velocity profiles of Red Geysers
Namrata Roy, Kevin Bundy, Rebecca Nevin, Francesco Belfiore, Renbin, Yan, Stephanie Campbell, Rogemar A. Riffel, Rogerio Riffel, Matthew Bershady,, Kyle Westfall, Niv Drory, Kai Zhang

TL;DR
This study provides high-resolution spectroscopic evidence of outflowing winds in red geysers, supporting the idea that galaxy-scale winds maintain their quiescent state and are responsible for their unique gas velocity profiles.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed kinematic analysis of red geysers using high-resolution spectroscopy, confirming the wind-driven nature of their gas dynamics.
Findings
Asymmetric emission line profiles indicate outflows consistent with conical winds.
High-resolution data resolves gas velocities, distinguishing winds from rotating disks.
Results support red geysers as galaxy-scale wind phenomena.
Abstract
Spatially resolved spectroscopy from SDSS-IV MaNGA survey has revealed a class of quiescent, relatively common early-type galaxies, termed "red geysers", that possibly host large scale active galactic nuclei driven winds. Given their potential importance in maintaining low level of star formation at late times, additional evidence confirming that winds are responsible for the red geyser phenomenon is critical. In this work, we present follow-up observations with the Echellette Spectrograph and Imager (ESI) at the Keck telescope of two red geysers (z0.1) using multiple long slit positions to sample different regions of each galaxy. Our ESI data with a spectral resolution (R) 8000 improves upon MaNGA's resolution by a factor of four, allowing us to resolve the ionized gas velocity profiles along the putative wind cone with an instrumental resolution of $\rm \sigma =…
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