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Being KLEVER at cosmic noon: ionised gas outflows are inconspicuous in low-mass star-forming galaxies but prominent in massive AGN hosts

Authors :
Alice Concas
Roberto Maiolino
Mirko Curti
Connor Hayden-Pawson
Michele Cirasuolo
Gareth C Jones
Amata Mercurio
Francesco Belfiore
Giovanni Cresci
Fergus Cullen
Filippo Mannucci
Alessandro Marconi
Michele Cappellari
Claudia Cicone
Yingjie Peng
Paulina Troncoso
Concas, A [0000-0003-3203-9818]
Hayden-Pawson, C [0000-0001-7964-1027]
Belfiore, F [0000-0002-2545-5752]
Cullen, F [0000-0002-3736-476X]
Mannucci, F [0000-0002-4803-2381]
Cappellari, M [0000-0002-1283-8420]
Troncoso, P [0000-0001-6162-3023]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We investigate the presence of ionised gas outflows in a sample of 141 main-sequence star-forming galaxies at $1.2 10.8$, AGN-dominated galaxies, suggesting that AGNs may be the primary drivers of these gas flows. Surprisingly, at $\log(M_\star/M_{\odot})\leq 9.6$, the observed line profiles are fully consistent with a rotating disc model, indicating that ionised gas outflows in dwarf galaxies might play a negligible role even during the peak of cosmic star-formation activity. Finally, we find that the observed mass loading factor scales with stellar mass as expected from the TNG50 cosmological simulation, but the ionised gas mass accounts for only 2$\%$ of the predicted value. This suggests that either the bulk of the outflowing mass is in other gaseous phases or the current feedback models implemented in cosmological simulations need to be revised.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 28 pages, 20 figures

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00358711
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb11065715918bf79be9d15a2c1e1fe0