Ionized Outflows in Nearby Quasars are Poorly Coupled to their Host Galaxies
Juan Molina, Luis C. Ho, Ran Wang, Jinyi Shangguan, Franz E. Bauer,, Ezequiel Treister, Ming-Yang Zhuang, Claudio Ricci, and Fuyan Bian

TL;DR
This study investigates ionized outflows in nearby quasars, revealing that AGN-driven feedback is weakly coupled to host galaxy gas, with low outflow rates and minimal impact on galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides detailed spatial and kinematic analysis of ionized outflows in low-redshift quasars, demonstrating their limited effectiveness in influencing host galaxy interstellar medium.
Findings
NLR size correlates with AGN luminosity, reaching ~5 kpc.
NLR geometry is biconical, aligned with ionization cones.
Derived outflow rates are very low, indicating weak feedback.
Abstract
We analyze Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer observations of nine low-redshift (z < 0.1) Palomar-Green quasar host galaxies to investigate the spatial distribution and kinematics of the warm, ionized interstellar medium, with the goal of searching for and constraining the efficiency of active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback. After separating the bright AGN from the starlight and nebular emission, we use pixel-wise, kpc-scale diagnostics to determine the underlying excitation mechanism of the line emission, and we measure the kinematics of the narrow-line region (NLR) to estimate the physical properties of the ionized outflows. The radial size of the NLR correlates with the AGN luminosity, reaching scales of kpc and beyond. The geometry of the NLR is well-represented by a projected biconical structure, suggesting that the AGN radiation preferably escapes through the ionization…
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