Multiphase characterization of AGN winds in five local type-2 quasars

Speranza, G.; Ramos Almeida, C.; Acosta-Pulido, J. A.; Audibert, A.; Holden, L. R.; Tadhunter, C. N.; Lapi, A.; González-Martín, O.; Brusa, M.; López, I. E.; Musiimenta, B.; Shankar, F.
Bibliographical reference

Astronomy and Astrophysics

Advertised on:
1
2024
Number of authors
12
IAC number of authors
4
Citations
7
Refereed citations
2
Description
We present MEGARA integral field unit (IFU) observations of five local type-2 quasars (QSO2s, z ∼ 0.1) from the Quasar Feedback (QSOFEED) sample. These active galactic nuclei (AGN) have bolometric luminosities of 1045.5 − 46 erg s−1 and stellar masses of ∼1011 M⊙. The LR-V grating of MEGARA allows us to explore the kinematics of the ionized gas through the [O III]λ5007 Å emission line. The nuclear spectra of the five QSO2s, extracted in a circular aperture of ∼1.2″ (∼2.2 kpc) in diameter, matching the resolution of these seeing-limited observations, show signatures of high velocity winds in the form of broad (full width at half maximum, 1300 ≤ FWHM ≤ 2240 km s−1) and blueshifted components. We found that four out of the five QSO2s present outflows that we can resolve with our seeing-limited data, and they have radii ranging from 3.1 to 12.6 kpc. In the case of the two QSO2s with extended radio emission, we found that it is well aligned with the outflows, suggesting that low-power jets might be compressing and accelerating the ionized gas in these radio-quiet QSO2s. In the four QSO2s with spatially resolved outflows, we measured ionized mass outflow rates of 3.3-6.5 M⊙ yr−1 when we used [S II]-based densities, and of 0.7-1.6 M⊙ yr−1 when trans-auroral line-based densities were considered instead. We compared them with the corresponding molecular mass outflow rates (8-16 M⊙ yr−1), derived from CO(2-1) ALMA observations at 0.2″ resolution. The cold molecular outflows carry more mass than their ionized counterparts. However, both phases show lower outflow mass rates than those expected from observational scaling relations where uniform assumptions on the outflow properties were adopted. This might be indicating that the AGN luminosity is not the only driver of massive outflows and/or that these relations need to be rescaled using accurate outflow properties (i.e., electron density and radius). We did not find a significant impact of the outflows on the global star formation rates when considering the energy budget of the molecular and ionized outflows together. However, spatially resolved measurements of recent star formation in these targets are needed in order to evaluate this fairly, considering the dynamical timescales of the outflows, of 3-20 Myr for the ionized gas and 1-10 Myr for the molecular gas.