Bibcode
Wild, V.; Rosales-Ortega, Fabian; Falcón-Barroso, J.; García-Benito, Rubén; Gallazzi, Anna; González Delgado, Rosa M.; Bekeraité, Simona; Pasquali, Anna; Johansson, Peter H.; García Lorenzo, B.; van de Ven, Glenn; Pawlik, Milena; Peréz, Enrique; Monreal-Ibero, Ana; Lyubenova, Mariya; Cid Fernandes, Roberto; Méndez-Abreu, Jairo; Barrera-Ballesteros, J.; Kehrig, Carolina; Iglesias-Páramo, Jorge; Bomans, Dominik J.; Márquez, Isabel; Johnson, Benjamin D.; Kennicutt, Robert C.; Husemann, Bernd; Mast, Damian; Sánchez, Sebastian F.; Walcher, C. Jakob; Alves, João; Aguerri, J. A. L.; Alonso Herrero, Almudena; Bland-Hawthorn, Joss; Catalán-Torrecilla, Cristina; Florido, Estrella; Gomes, Jean Michel; Jahnke, Knud; López-Sánchez, Á. R.; de Lorenzo-Cáceres, Adriana; Marino, Raffaella A.; Mármol-Queraltó, Esther; Olden, Patrick; del Olmo, Ascensión; Papaderos, Polychronis; Quirrenbach, Andreas; Vílchez, Jose M.; Ziegler, Bodo
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 567, id.A132, 21 pp.
Advertised on:
7
2014
Journal
Citations
48
Refereed citations
43
Description
We present optical integral field spectroscopy (IFS) observations of the
Mice, a major merger between two massive (≳1011
M⊙) gas-rich spirals NGC 4676A and B, observed between
first passage and final coalescence. The spectra provide stellar and gas
kinematics, ionised gas properties, and stellar population diagnostics,
over the full optical extent of both galaxies with ~1.6 kpc spatial
resolution. The Mice galaxies provide a perfect case study that
highlights the importance of IFS data for improving our understanding of
local galaxies. The impact of first passage on the kinematics of the
stars and gas has been significant, with strong bars most likely induced
in both galaxies. The barred spiral NGC 4676B exhibits a strong twist in
both its stellar and ionised gas disk. The edge-on disk galaxy NGC 4676A
appears to be bulge free, with a strong bar causing its "boxy" light
profile. On the other hand, the impact of the merger on the stellar
populations has been minimal thus far. By combining the IFS data with
archival multiwavelength observations we show that star formation
induced by the recent close passage has not contributed significantly to
the total star formation rate or stellar mass of the galaxies. Both
galaxies show bicones of high ionisation gas extending along their minor
axes. In NGC 4676A the high gas velocity dispersion and Seyfert-like
line ratios at large scaleheight indicate a powerful outflow. Fast
shocks (vs ~ 350 km s-1) extend to ~6.6 kpc above
the disk plane. The measured ram pressure (P/k = 4.8 ×
106 K cm-3) and mass outflow rate (~8-20
M⊙ yr-1) are similar to superwinds from local
ultra-luminous infrared galaxies, although NGC 4676A only has a moderate
infrared luminosity of 3 × 1010 L⊙.
Energy beyond what is provided by the mechanical energy of the starburst
appears to be required to drive the outflow. Finally, we compare the
observations to mock kinematic and stellar population maps extracted
from a hydrodynamical merger simulation. The models show little
enhancement in star formation during and following first passage, in
agreement with the observations. We highlight areas where IFS data could
help further constrain the models.
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