Resolved velocity profiles of galactic winds at Cosmic Noon
Keerthi Vasan G.C., Tucker Jones, Ryan L. Sanders, Richard S. Ellis,, Daniel P. Stark, Glenn Kacprzak, Tania M. Barone, Kim-Vy H. Tran, Karl, Glazebrook, Colin Jacobs

TL;DR
This study analyzes the velocity structure of galactic winds in 20 high-redshift galaxies, revealing outflow characteristics, correlations with galaxy properties, and emphasizing the importance of spectral resolution for accurate measurements.
Contribution
It provides the largest sample of well-resolved galactic wind velocities at $z>2$ and compares observational results with cosmological simulations, highlighting resolution requirements.
Findings
Galaxies show outflow velocities with average $v_{cent}=-141$ km/s.
Positive skewness indicates high-velocity blueshifted gas in most galaxies.
Spectral resolution of $R extgreater1700$ is necessary for accurate kinematic measurements.
Abstract
We study the kinematics of the interstellar medium (ISM) viewed "down the barrel" in 20 gravitationally lensed galaxies during Cosmic Noon (). We use moderate-resolution spectra () from Keck/ESI and Magellan/MagE to spectrally resolve the ISM absorption in these galaxies into 10 independent elements and use double Gaussian fits to quantify the velocity structure of the gas. We find that the bulk motion of gas in this galaxy sample is outflowing, with average velocity centroid kms ( kms scatter) measured with respect to the systemic redshift. 16 out of the 20 galaxies exhibit a clear positive skewness, with a blueshifted tail extending to kms. We examine scaling relations in outflow velocities with galaxy stellar mass and star formation rate (SFR), finding correlations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
