The SAMI Galaxy Survey: impact of star formation and AGN feedback processes on the ionized gas velocity dispersion
Sree Oh, Matthew Colless, Stefania Barsanti, Henry R. M. Zovaro, Scott, M. Croom, Sukyoung K. Yi, Andrei Ristea, Jesse van de Sande, Francesco, D'Eugenio, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Julia J. Bryant, Sarah Casura, Hyunjin Jeong,, Sarah M. Sweet, Tayyaba Zafar

TL;DR
This study examines how star formation and AGN feedback influence ionized gas velocity dispersion in galaxies, revealing that AGN-driven outflows significantly elevate velocity dispersion, with star formation also contributing moderately.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of emission-line components and their relation to galaxy properties, highlighting the role of AGN feedback in gas dynamics.
Findings
AGN-like emissions correlate with higher velocity dispersions.
Broad emission components are linked to galactic outflows.
Star formation activity moderately increases gas velocity dispersion.
Abstract
We investigate the influence of star formation and instantaneous AGN feedback processes on the ionized gas velocity dispersion in a sample of 1285 emission-line galaxies with stellar masses from the integral-field spectroscopy SAMI Galaxy Survey. We fit both narrow and broad emission line components using aperture spectra integrated within one effective radius, while ensuring the elimination of velocity differences between the spectra of individual spaxels. Our analysis reveals that 386 (30%) galaxies can be adequately described using a single emission component while 356 (28%) galaxies require two (broad and narrow) components. Galaxies characterized by high mass, elevated star formation rate surface density, or type-2 AGN-like emissions tend to feature an additional broad emission-line component, leading to their classification as double-component…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
