The Ionization and Dynamics of the Makani Galactic Wind
Abstract
The Makani galaxy hosts the poster child of a galactic wind on scales of the circumgalactic medium. It consists of a two-episode wind in which the slow, outer wind originated 400 Myr ago (Episode I; RI = 20-50 kpc) and the fast, inner wind is 7 Myr old (Episode II; RII = 0-20 kpc). While this wind contains ionized, neutral, and molecular gas, the physical state and mass of the most extended phase--the warm, ionized gas--is unknown. Here we present Keck optical spectra of the Makani outflow. These allow us to detect hydrogen lines out to r = 30-40 kpc and thus constrain the mass, momentum, and energy in the wind. Many collisionally-excited lines are detected throughout the wind, and their line ratios are consistent with 200-400 km/s shocks that power the ionized gas, with vshock = σwind. Combining shock models, density-sensitive line ratios, and mass and velocity measurements, we estimate that the ionized mass and outflow rate in the Episode II wind could be as high as that of the molecular gas: MII(HII) ~ MII(H2) = (1-2)x109 Msun and dM/dtII(HII) ~ dM/dtII(H2) = 170-250 Msun/yr. The outer wind has slowed, so that dM/dtI(HII) ~ 10 Msun/yr, but it contains more ionized gas: MI(HII) = 5x109 Msun. The momentum and energy in the recent Episode II wind imply a momentum-driven flow (p ``boost" ~ 7) driven by the hot ejecta and radiation pressure from the Eddington-limited, compact starburst. Much of the energy and momentum in the older Episode I wind may reside in a hotter phase, or lie further into the CGM.
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