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Tracing the Ionization Structure of the Shocked Filaments of NGC 6240

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Authors

Medling, Anne
Kewley, Lisa
Calzetti, Daniela
Privon, G.C.
Larson, Kirsten
Rich, Jeffrey
Armus, Lee
Allen, Mark G.
Bicknell, Geoffrey
Díaz-Santos, T.

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Institute of Physics Publishing

Abstract

We study the ionization and excitation structure of the interstellar medium in the late-stage gas-rich galaxy merger NGC 6240 using a suite of emission-line maps at similar to 25 pc resolution from the Hubble Space Telescope, Keck/NIRC2 with Adaptive Optics, and the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). NGC 6240 hosts a superwind driven by intense star formation and/or one or both of two active nuclei; the outflows produce bubbles and filaments seen in shock tracers from warm molecular gas (H-2 2.12 mu m) to optical ionized gas ([O iii], [N ii], [S ii], and [O i]) and hot plasma (Fe XXV). In the most distinct bubble, we see a clear shock front traced by high [O iii]/H beta and [O iii]/[O i]. Cool molecular gas (CO(2-1)) is only present near the base of the bubble, toward the nuclei launching the outflow. We interpret the lack of molecular gas outside the bubble to mean that the shock front is not responsible for dissociating molecular gas, and conclude that the molecular clouds are partly shielded and either entrained briefly in the outflow, or left undisturbed while the hot wind flows around them. Elsewhere in the galaxy, shock-excited H-2 extends at least similar to 4 kpc from the nuclei, tracing molecular gas even warmer than that between the nuclei, where the two galaxies' interstellar media are colliding. A ridgeline of high [O iii]/H beta emission along the eastern arm aligns with the southern nucleus' stellar disk minor axis; optical integral field spectroscopy from WiFeS suggests this highly ionized gas is centered at systemic velocity and likely photoionized by direct line of sight to the southern active galactic nucleus.

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The Astrophysical Journal

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Open Access

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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

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