Complex gas kinematics in compact, rapidly assembling star-forming galaxies
Abstract
Deep, high resolution spectroscopic observations have been obtained for six compact, strongly star-forming galaxies at redshift z~0.1-0.3, most of them also known as Green Peas. Remarkably, these galaxies show complex emission-line profiles in the spectral region including Hα, [NII]λλ 6548, 6584 and [SII]λλ 6717, 6731, consisting of the superposition of different kinematical components on a spatial extent of few kpc: a very broad line emission underlying more than one narrower component. For at least two of the observed galaxies some of these multiple components are resolved spatially in their 2D-spectra, whereas for another one a faint detached Hα\ blob lacking stellar continuum is detected at the same recessional velocity ~7 kpc away from the galaxy. The individual narrower Hα\ components show high intrinsic velocity dispersion (σ ~30-80 km s-1), suggesting together with unsharped masking HST images that star formation proceeds in an ensemble of several compact and turbulent clumps, with relative velocities of up to ~500 km s-1. The broad underlying Hα\ components indicate in all cases large expansion velocities (full width zero intensity FWZI 1000 km s-1) and very high luminosities (up to ~1042 erg s-1), probably showing the imprint of energetic outflows from SNe. These intriguing results underline the importance of Green Peas for studying the assembly of low-mass galaxies near and far.
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