SDSS IV MaNGA: Discovery of an Hα blob associated with a dry galaxy pair -- ejected gas or a `dark' galaxy candidate?
Abstract
We report the discovery of a mysterious giant Hα blob that is 8 kpc away from the main MaNGA target 1-24145, one component of a dry galaxy merger, identified in the first-year SDSS-IV MaNGA data. The size of the Hα blob is 3-4 kpc in radius, and the Hα distribution is centrally concentrated. However, there is no optical continuum counterpart in deep broadband images reaching 26.9 mag arcsec-2 in surface brightness. We estimate that the masses of ionized and cold gases are 3.3 × 105 M and < 1.3 × 109 M, respectively. The emission-line ratios indicate that the Hα blob is photoionized by a combination of massive young stars and AGN. Furthermore, the ionization line ratio decreases from MaNGA 1-24145 to the Hα blob, suggesting that the primary ionizing source may come from MaNGA 1-24145, likely a low-activity AGN. Possible explanations of this Hα blob include AGN outflow, the gas remnant being tidally or ram-pressure stripped from MaNGA 1-24145, or an extremely low surface brightness (LSB) galaxy. However, the stripping scenario is less favoured according to galaxy merger simulations and the morphology of the Hα blob. With the current data, we can not distinguish whether this Hα blob is ejected gas due to a past AGN outburst, or a special category of `ultra-diffuse galaxy' (UDG) interacting with MaNGA 1-24145 that further induces the gas inflow to fuel the AGN in MaNGA 1-24145.