A Fast, Hot Wind from a Nuclear Starburst
XRISM Collaboration: Marc Audard, Hisamitsu Awaki, Ralf Ballhausen, Aya Bamba, Ehud Behar, Rozenn Boissay-Malaquin, Laura Brenneman, Gregory V. Brown, Lia Corrales, Elisa Costantini, Renata Cumbee, Mar\'ia D\'iaz Trigo, Chris Done, Tadayasu Dotani, Ken Ebisawa, Megan E. Eckart

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that thermal gas pressure alone can drive galaxy-scale winds in starburst galaxy M82, providing detailed measurements of hot gas properties and showing that supernovae thermalization is sufficient for wind launching.
Contribution
It provides the first direct measurements of hot gas temperature, mass, and velocity dispersion in a starburst wind, confirming thermal pressure as the primary driving mechanism.
Findings
Hot gas temperature is approximately 2.3 x 10^7 K.
Hot gas outflow rate is about 4 solar masses per year.
Supernova energy thermalization accounts for wind launching.
Abstract
Galaxies with intense star formation often host multiphase, galaxy-scale winds powered by supernovae and fast stellar winds. These are strong enough to disrupt the star-forming interstellar medium, and they chemically enrich the surrounding circumgalactic medium. However, their launching mechanism remains unknown. Here we show that thermal gas pressure is sufficient to drive the multiphase wind in the prototypical starburst galaxy M82. Using a high energy-resolution ( eV) XRISM Resolve spectrum, including detections of FeXXV 6.7 keV, ArXVII 3.1 keV, and SXVI 2.6 keV, we measure the temperature ( K) and mass ( M) of the hot gas in the starburst and provide the first direct measurement of its line-of-sight velocity dispersion ( km s). These values are consistent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
