The link between galaxy merger, radio jet expansion and molecular outflow in the ULIRG IRAS 00183-7111
Ilaria Ruffa (Cardiff University/INAF-Arcetri), Marilena Spavone (INAF-OAC), Enrichetta Iodice (INAF-OAC), Santiago Garcia-Burillo (OAN), Timothy A. Davis (Cardiff University), Kazushi Iwasawa (ICCUB/ICREA), Henrik W. W. Spoon (Cornell Center), Rosita Paladino (INAF-IRA)

TL;DR
This study links galaxy merger, AGN ignition, radio jet expansion, and molecular outflow in the ULIRG IRAS 00183-7111, revealing how a recent major merger fuels AGN activity and influences gas dynamics.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-wavelength analysis showing the connection between galaxy merger, molecular gas distribution, and jet-driven outflows in a ULIRG with an active nucleus.
Findings
Major merger formed the galaxy within 2 Gyr.
Significant molecular gas was funneled to the center, likely triggering AGN and jets.
Detected molecular outflow with velocity ~439 km/s and mass outflow rate ~609 M_sun/yr.
Abstract
The ultraluminous infrared galaxy (ULIRG) IRAS 00183-7111 () is one of the three ULIRGs that are currently known to host an active galactic nucleus (AGN) with small-scale radio jets. We present a detailed study of the link between galaxy merger, AGN ignition, radio jet expansion and kpc-scale molecular outflow in IRAS 00183-7111, using high-resolution Atacama Large Millimeter/sub-millimeter Array (ALMA) observations of the CO(1-0) and CO(3-2) lines and very deep -band VLT Survey Telescope (VST) imaging. The latter allows us to put constraints on the assembly history of the system, suggesting that it formed through a major merger between two gas-rich spirals, likely characterised by a prograde encounter and no older than ~Gyr. The recent merger channelled about ~M\textsubscript{} of molecular gas in the central regions…
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