GOALS-JWST: The Warm Molecular Outflows of the Merging Starburst Galaxy NGC 3256

Abstract

We present James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Integral Field Spectrograph observations of NGC 3256, a local infrared-luminous late-stage merging system with two nuclei roughly 1\;kpc apart, both of which have evidence of cold molecular outflows. Using JWST/NIRSpec and MIRI datasets, we investigate this morphologically complex system on spatial scales of <100\;pc, where we focus on the warm molecular H2 gas surrounding the nuclei. We detect collimated outflowing warm H2 gas originating from the southern nucleus, though we do not find significant outflowing H2 gas surrounding the northern nucleus. We measure maximum intrinsic outflow velocities of 1,000\;km\;s-1, which extend out to a distance of 0.7\;kpc. Based on H2 S(7)/S(1) ratios, we find a larger fraction of warmer gas near the S nucleus, which decreases with increasing distance from the nucleus, signifying the southern nucleus as a primary source of H2 heating. The gas mass of the warm H2 outflow component is estimated to be Mwarm,out=(1.40.2)×106\;M, as much as 6\% of the cold H2 mass estimated using ALMA CO data. The outflow time scale is about 7×105\;yr, resulting in a mass outflow rate Mwarm,out=2.00.8\;M\;yr-1 and kinetic power Pwarm,out\;\;4×1041\;erg\;s-1. Lastly, regions within our 3.0"x3.0" NIRSpec data where the outflowing gas reside show high [Fe II]/Paβ and H2/Brγ line ratios, indicate enhanced mechanical heating caused by the outflows. The fluxes and ratios of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH) in these regions are not significantly different compared to those elsewhere in the disk, suggesting the outflows may not significantly alter the PAH ionization state or grain size.

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