First statistical constraints on galactic scale outflows properties traced by their extended Mg II emission with MUSE
Ismael Pessa, Lutz Wisotzki, Tanya Urrutia, Nicolas F. Bouch\'e, Floriane Leclercq, Ramona Augustin, Yucheng Guo, Daria Kozlova, Haruka Kusakabe, John Pharo

TL;DR
This study presents the first statistical analysis of galaxy-scale MgII outflows using deep MUSE data for 47 star-forming galaxies, revealing insights into outflow properties and their dependence on galaxy characteristics.
Contribution
It extends previous single-object outflow modeling to a larger sample, enabling population-level understanding of circumgalactic MgII-emitting outflows.
Findings
MgII halos extend up to tens of kiloparsecs.
Outflows accelerate linearly with radius, reaching velocities up to ~490 km/s.
Outflow properties correlate with galaxy stellar mass and star formation activity.
Abstract
Galaxies evolve within vast gaseous halos that fuel star formation and carry signatures of feedback-driven outflows. Deep integral field data have enabled the study of MgII halos, which trace galaxy-scale outflows in emission, but their faintness has limited studies to single-object analyses. Here, we present the first statistical study of MgII-emitting halos using deep MUSE observations of 47 star-forming galaxies at . Building on our previous work, where we developed and applied an outflow modeling framework for a single MgII halo, we now extend this approach to a larger sample, enabling robust population-level insights on the properties of circumgalactic outflows traced by their extended MgII emission. We detect extended emission out to tens of kiloparsecs and model the outflows as an ensemble of radially accelerating shells. Galaxies with MgII outflows tend to have higher…
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