Warm ionized gas in the blue compact galaxy Haro 14 viewed by MUSE. The diverse ionization mechanisms acting in low-mass starbursts
L. M. Cair\'os (1), J. N. Gonz\'alez-P\'erez (2), P. M. Weilbacher, (3), R. Manso Sainz (4) ((1) Institut f\"ur Astrophysik,, Georg-August-Universit\"at, G\"ottingen, Germany, (2) Hamburger Sternwarte,, Hamburg, Germany, (3) Leibniz-Institut f\"ur Astrophysik (AIP), Potsdam,

TL;DR
This study uses MUSE/VLT observations to analyze the ionized gas in the blue compact galaxy Haro 14, revealing complex ionization mechanisms and structures extending up to kiloparsec scales, including outflow-driven filaments and diffuse emission.
Contribution
First detailed spatially resolved analysis of ionization mechanisms in the outskirts of a typical blue compact galaxy using MUSE data.
Findings
Identification of distinct central and diffuse ionized gas components.
Detection of filamentary structures likely tracing supergiant bubbles.
Evidence of multiple ionization mechanisms beyond star formation photoionization.
Abstract
We investigate the warm ionized gas in the blue compact galaxy (BCG) Haro 14 by means of integral field spectroscopic observations taken with the MUSE/VLT. The large FoV of MUSE and its unprecedented sensitivity enable observations of the galaxy nebular emission up to large galactocentric distances. This allowed us to trace the ionized gas morphology and ionization structure up to kiloparsec scales and, for the first time, to accurately investigate the excitation mechanism operating in the outskirts of a typical BCG. The intensity and diagnostic maps reveal at least two highly distinct components of ionized gas: the bright central regions, mostly made of individual clumps, and a faint component which extends up to kiloparsec scales and consists of widespread diffuse emission, well-delineated filamentary structures, and faint knots. Noteworthy are the two curvilinear filaments extending…
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.
