Resolved neutral outflow from a lensed dusty star-forming galaxy at z=2.09

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Kirsty M. Butler (Universiteit Leiden)

Paul P. van der Werf (Universiteit Leiden)

Matus Rybak (TU Delft - Tera-Hertz Sensing, Universiteit Leiden)

Tiago Costa (Max-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik)

Pierre Cox (UPMC-Sorbonne Universités & CNRS)

Axel Weiß (Max-Planck-Institut für Radio-astronomie)

Michał J. Michałowski (Adam Mickiewicz University)

Dominik A. Riechers (Cornell University)

Dimitra Rigopoulou (University of Oxford)

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DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac0c7a Final published version
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Journal title
Astrophysical Journal
Issue number
1
Volume number
919
Article number
5
Pages (from-to)
1-25
Downloads counter
262

Abstract

We report the detection of a massive neutral gas outflow in the z = 2.09 gravitationally lensed dusty star-forming galaxy HATLAS J085358.9+015537 (G09v1.40), seen in absorption with the OH+(11-10) transition using spatially resolved (0"5 × 0"4) Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations. The blueshifted OH+ line is observed simultaneously with the CO(9-8) emission line and underlying dust continuum. These data are complemented by high-angular-resolution (0"17 × 0"13) ALMA observations of CH+(1-0) and underlying dust continuum, and Keck 2.2 μm imaging tracing the stellar emission. The neutral outflow, dust, dense molecular gas, and stars all show spatial offsets from each other. The total atomic gas mass of the observed outflow is 6.7 × 109M⊙, >25% as massive as the gas mass of the galaxy. We find that a conical outflow geometry best describes the OH+ kinematics and morphology and derive deprojected outflow properties as functions of possible inclination (0°.38-64°). The neutral gas mass outflow rate is between 83 and 25,400 M⊙ yr-1, exceeding the star formation rate (788 ± 300M⊙ yr-1) if the inclination is >3°.6 (mass-loading factor = 0.3-4.7). Kinetic energy and momentum fluxes span (4.4-290) × 109 L⊙ and (0.1-3.7) × 1037 dyne, respectively (energy-loading factor = 0.013-16), indicating that the feedback mechanisms required to drive the outflow depend on the inclination assumed. We derive a gas depletion time between 29 and 1 Myr, but find that the neutral outflow is likely to remain bound to the galaxy unless the inclination is small and may be reaccreted if additional feedback processes do not occur.