Shocked gas in IRAS F17207-0014: ISM collisions and outflows
/ Authors
A. Medling, U. Vivian, J. Rich, L. Kewley, L. Armus, M. Dopita, M. Dopita, M. Dopita, C. Max, D. Sanders
and 1 more author
/ Abstract
We combine optical and near-infrared adaptive optics-assisted integral field observations of the merging ultraluminous infrared galaxies IRAS F17207-0014 from the Wide-Field Spectrograph and Keck/OH-Suppressing Infra-Red Imaging Spectrograph (OSIRIS). The optical emission line ratios [N ii]/Hα, [S ii]/Hα, and [O i]/Hα reveal a mixing sequence of shocks present throughout the galaxy, with the strongest contributions coming from large radii (up to 100 per cent at ∼5 kpc in some directions), suggesting galactic-scale winds. The near-infrared observations, which have approximately 30 times higher spatial resolution, show that two sorts of shocks are present in the vicinity of the merging nuclei: low-level shocks distributed throughout our field-of-view evidenced by an H_2/Brγ line ratio of ∼0.6–4, and strong collimated shocks with a high H_2/Brγ line ratio of ∼4–8, extending south from the two nuclear discs approximately 400 pc (∼0.5 arcsec). Our data suggest that the diffuse shocks are caused by the collision of the interstellar media associated with the two progenitor galaxies and the strong shocks trace the base of a collimated outflow coming from the nucleus of one of the two discs.
Journal: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stv081