Abstract

We present the detection and morphological characterization of hot molecular gas outflows in nearby ultra-luminous infrared galaxies, using the near-IR integral-field spectrograph SINFONI on the VLT. We detect outflows observed in the 2.12 micron H$_{2}$ 1-0 S(1) line for three out of four ULIRGs analyzed; IRAS 12112+0305, 14348-1447, and 22491-1808. The outflows are mapped on scales of 0.7-1.6 kpc, show typical outflow velocities of 300-500 km/s, and appear to originate from the nuclear region. The outflows comprise hot molecular gas masses of ~6-8x10$^3$ M(sun). Assuming a hot-to-cold molecular gas mass ratio of 6x10$^{-5}$, as found in nearby luminous IR galaxies, the total (hot+cold) molecular gas mass in these outflows is expected to be ~1x10$^{8}$ M(sun). This translates into molecular mass outflow rates of ~30-85 M(sun)/yr, which is a factor of a few lower than the star formation rate in these ULIRGs. In addition, most of the outflowing molecular gas does not reach the escape velocity of these merger systems, which implies that the bulk of the outflowing molecular gas is re-distributed within the system and thus remains available for future star formation. The fastest H$_{2}$ outflow is seen in the Compton-thick AGN of IRAS 14348-1447, reaching a maximum outflow velocity of ~900 km/s. Another ULIRG, IRAS 17208-0014, shows asymmetric H$_{2}$ line profiles different from the outflows seen in the other three ULIRGs. We discuss several alternative explanations for its line asymmetries, including a very gentle galactic wind, internal gas dynamics, low-velocity gas outside the disk, or two superposed gas disks. We do not detect the hot molecular counterpart to the outflow previously detected in CO(2-1) in IRAS 17208-0014, but we note that our SINFONI data are not sensitive enough to detect this outflow if it has a small hot-to-cold molecular gas mass ratio of < 9x10$^{-6}$.

Highlights

  • Ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) are dust-enshrouded galaxies with massive starbursts and often a deeply buried active galactic nucleus (AGN), which may have been triggered by a gas-rich galaxy merger (Sanders & Mirabel 1996)

  • In Appendix A we describe the basic properties of the broad-component emission in each ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs)

  • We presented the detection and characterization of massive outflows of hot molecular gas in three out of four nearby ULIRGs

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Summary

Introduction

Ultra-luminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) are dust-enshrouded galaxies with massive starbursts and often a deeply buried active galactic nucleus (AGN), which may have been triggered by a gas-rich galaxy merger (Sanders & Mirabel 1996). A crucial aspect in the evolution of ULIRGs has been the discovery of massive gas outflows driven by starburst or AGN activity. These outflows have been extensively studied in both ionized and neutral gas (e.g., Heckman et al 1990; Lehnert & Heckman 1996; Rupke & Veilleux 2011, 2013a, 2015; Westmoquette et al 2012; Bellocchi et al 2013; Morganti et al 2013; Rodríguez Zaurín et al 2013; Feruglio et al 2015; Arribas et al 2014; Cazzoli et al 2014, 2016). The full impact of outflows in ULIRGs has only been revealed with the discovery of massive outflows of molecular gas

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