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Powerful ionized gas outflows in the interacting radio galaxy 4C +29.30

Published 29 Jul 2020 in astro-ph.GA | (2007.14977v1)

Abstract: We investigate the ionized gas excitation and kinematics in the inner $4.3 \times 6.2$ kpc${2}$ of the merger radio galaxy 4C +29.30. Using optical integral field spectroscopy with the Gemini North Telescope, we present flux distributions, line-ratio maps, peak velocities and velocity dispersion maps as well as channel maps with a spatial resolution of $\approx 955$ pc. We observe high blueshifts of up to $\sim -650$ km s${-1}$, in a region $\sim 1''$ south of the nucleus (the southern knot, SK), which also presents high velocity dispersions ($\sim 250$ km s${-1}$), which we attribute to an outflow. A possible redshifted counterpart is observed north from the nucleus (the northern knot, NK). We propose that these regions correspond to a bipolar outflow possibly due to the interaction of the radio jet with the ambient gas. We estimate a total ionized gas mass outflow rate of $\dot{M}{out} = 25.4 \substack{+11.5 \ -7.5}$ M$\odot$ yr${-1}$ with a kinetic power of $\dot{E} = 8.1 \substack{+10.7 \ -4.0} \times 10{42}$ erg s${-1}$, which represents $5.8 \substack{+7.6 \ -2.9} \%$ of the AGN bolometric luminosity. These values are higher than usually observed in nearby active galaxies with the same bolometric luminosities and could imply a significant impact of the outflows in the evolution of the host galaxy. The excitation is higher in the NK (that correlates with extended X-ray emission, indicating the presence of hotter gas) than in the SK, supporting a scenario in which an obscuring dust lane is blocking part of the AGN radiation to reach the southern region of the galaxy.

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