The Baltimore Oriole's Nest: Cool Winds from the Inner and Outer Parts of a Star-Forming Galaxy at z=1.3
Weichen Wang, Susan A. Kassin, S. M. Faber, David C. Koo, Emily C., Cunningham, Hassen M. Yesuf, Guillermo Barro, Puragra Guhathakurta, Benjamin, Weiner, Alexander de la Vega, Yicheng Guo, Timothy M Heckman, Camilla, Pacifici, Bingjie Wang, Charlotte Welker

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins and properties of cool galactic winds in a massive galaxy at redshift 1.3, revealing winds are launched from multiple regions likely driven by extended star formation, with implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides spatially resolved measurements of cool winds in a high-redshift galaxy, demonstrating winds originate from both central and outer regions, driven by extended star formation.
Findings
Blueshifted winds up to 450 km/s detected in both regions.
Mass outflow rates estimated at 3-4 solar masses per year.
Winds likely launched from entire galaxy due to extended star formation.
Abstract
Strong galactic winds are ubiquitous at . However, it is not well known where inside galaxies these winds are launched from. We study the cool winds (\,K) in two spatial regions of a massive galaxy at , which we nickname the "Baltimore Oriole's Nest." The galaxy has a stellar mass of , is located on the star-forming main sequence, and has a morphology indicative of a recent merger. Gas kinematics indicate a dynamically complex system with velocity gradients ranging from 0 to 60 . The two regions studied are: a dust-reddened center (Central region), and a blue arc at 7 kpc from the center (Arc region). We measure the \ion{Fe}{2} and \ion{Mg}{2} absorption line profiles from deep Keck/DEIMOS spectra. Blueshifted wings up to 450 kms are found for both regions. The \ion{Fe}{2} column…
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