Galactic Winds
Galactic Winds
Galactic Winds
Sylvain Veilleux
Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742;
E-mail: veilleux@astro.umd.edu
arXiv:astro-ph/0504435v3 19 Jul 2005
Gerald Cecil
Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill, NC 27599-3255; E-mail: cecil@physics.unc.edu
Joss Bland-Hawthorn
Anglo-Australian Observatory, Epping, NSW, Australia; E-mail:
jbh@aaoepp.aao.gov.au
Abstract Galactic winds are the primary mechanism by which energy and metals are recycled
in galaxies and are deposited into the intergalactic medium. New observations are revealing
the ubiquity of this process, particularly at high redshift. We describe the physics behind these
winds, discuss the observational evidence for them in nearby star-forming and active galaxies and
in the high-redshift universe, and consider the implications of energetic winds for the formation
and evolution of galaxies and the intergalactic medium. To inspire future research, we conclude
with a set of observational and theoretical challenges.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Fundamental role . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Early History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Review structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
BASIC PHYSICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Sources of Energy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Wind-blown bubbles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Galactic winds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Hydrodynamical Simulations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
FUTURE DIRECTIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Observational Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Theoretical Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
1 INTRODUCTION
2
Galactic Winds 3
2 BASIC PHYSICS
In these expressions, the supernova rate ≈ 0.02 (SF R/1 M⊙ yr−1 ) yr−1 .
For comparison, the starburst’s radiation pressure, τ Lbol /c, is
(Kennicutt 1998), the radiation pressure in the optically thick case (τ = 1) can
be comparable to the pressure from the stellar ejecta.
In general, stellar winds are important only in young (< 7
∼ 10 yr) starbursts that
form many high-mass (> ∼ 60 M⊙ ) stars in a metal-rich (Z > Z⊙ ) environment.
In any other situation, SN explosions dominate the energetics of the ISM. SN
6 Veilleux, Cecil & Bland-Hawthorn
explosions usually dominate by the time GWs develop, but stellar winds may be
important in superbubbles. Because the star formation activity in a starburst
is highly correlated spatially, the ejecta from hot stars and SNe in the starburst
region quickly interact through shocks, and mix with the surrounding gas to
produce a cavity of hot, metal-enriched material. The thermalization efficiency
is the percentage of the mechanical energy from the starburst that heats the gas.
Unfortunately, as we show in §3 and §4, this quantity is poorly constrained by
observations. Hydro simulations (§2.4) often assume it is 100%, i.e. none of
the energy injected by the starburst is radiated away. In reality, this efficiency
is set by the environment, particularly by the gas density, and may be < ∼ 10%
in the dense cores of powerful nuclear starbursts (e.g., Thornton et al. 1998;
Silich, Tenorio-Tagle, & Muñoz-Tuñón 2003; Stevens & Hartwell 2003; Melioli &
de Gouveia Dal Pino 2004). Conversely, large SN rates may increase the porosity
of the ISM, and hence reduce radiative energy losses (e.g., Larson 1974; Cantó,
Raga, & Rodriguez 2000; Wada & Norman 2001). Current data favor values > ∼
10% for the thermalization efficiency (see §4.5).
2.1.2 AGN The ubiquity of supermassive BHs at the center of galaxies
(e.g., Kormendy & Gebhardt 2001) suggests that BH activity may also power
some galactic-scale outflows by accretion:
Ė ≃ 1011 (ǫ/0.01) Ṁacc L⊙ , (6)
where Ṁacc is the mass accretion rate in M⊙ yr−1 and ǫ, the energy conversion ef-
ficiency in rest mass units. The mass accretion rate ranges from < −1
∼ 0.001 M⊙ yr
for low-luminosity AGN, ∼ 1 M⊙ yr−1 for Seyfert galaxies, and ∼ 100 M⊙ yr−1
for quasars and powerful radio galaxies. The parameter ǫ depends on BH spin
and the boundary conditions near the event horizon, and can reach ǫ ≈ 0.4 (e.g.,
Krolik 1999; Agol & Krolik 2000). Much of the energy released during accretion
may be tapped to drive a GW; this can occur through several processes.
Radiative processes may be important in luminous AGN such as Seyfert galax-
ies and quasars. Radiation can push on the surrounding gas via electron scat-
tering, scattering and absorption on dust grains, photoionization, or scattering
in atomic resonance lines. The last one is important for O-star winds and is
suspected to be responsible for fast (∼ 0.03 c) outflows in broad absorption-line
quasars (BAL QSOs) (Crenshaw, Kraemer, & George 2003). In terms of dynam-
ics, the small opacity to electron scattering (κes = 7 × 10−25 x cm2 per hydrogen
atom, with x the ionization fraction) makes this process unimportant relative to
radiation pressure acting on dust grains (effective opacity κd ∼ 10−21 cm2 per
H atom), unless the material under consideration is within the dust sublimation
√
radius, rsubl ≈ 1 L46 pc (L46 is the UV/soft X-ray luminosity in units of 1046
erg s−1 ), and the dust temperature exceeds Tsubl ≈ 1200 K. Dopita et al. (2002)
have shown that dust absorption dominates over photoelectric absorption when
U > ∼ αB /(cκd ) ∼ 0.01, where αB is the Case B recombination rate to excited
states of hydrogen (Osterbrock 1989) and U is the ionization parameter, i.e. the
ratio of photon to electron number density. Radiation pressure on dust is there-
fore probably unimportant in low-luminosity AGN and low-ionization nuclear
Galactic Winds 7
where Ė is the fraction of the mechanical energy injection rate that is thermalized
and Ṁ is the rate at which the mass is heated. For a starburst, equation (7) can
be re-written using equations (1) and (2) and assuming µ = 1.4:
where R∗ is the radius of the injection zone (Chevalier & Clegg 1985). R∗ is the
radius of the star-forming region in the case of a starburst-driven wind. We can
rewrite equation (9) using equation (3) in this case:
ṗ ≃ 2 × 1034 no rshell,kpc
2 2
Vshell,100 dyne. (14)
where Hkpc is the disk scale height in kpc and P7 , the ambient pressure P/k
in 107 K cm−3 , typical of starbursts (Schiano 1985; MacLow & McCray 1988;
Norman & Ikeuchi 1989; MacLow, McCray, & Norman 1989; Koo & McKee
1992a; Strickland et al. 2004b).
The steady-flow wind is a strong function of polar angle seen from the star-
burst: The flow is a free wind up to the critical angle at which its ram pressure
becomes comparable to the thermal pressure in the diffuse ISM. At larger angles,
a standing bow shock in the galaxy disk decelerates and deflects the wind around
undisturbed ISM. The terminal velocity of the wind can be estimated by equating
the total energy deposition rate ξ Ė to the asymptotic rate of kinetic energy (KE)
loss: 12 ΛṀ V∞
2 ≈ ξ Ė. For a starburst-driven wind (eqns. 1 and 2) we obtain
1 1
V∞ ≈ (2 ξ Ė/ΛṀ ) 2 ≈ 3000 (ξ/Λ) 2 km s−1 . (16)
The Λ dependence is easy to understand: cold ISM gas that feels the full brunt
of the wind is shock heated and evaporated and eventually mass loads the hot
flow, which slows the wind. Equation (16) assumes negligible halo drag.
Because momentum from the starburst or AGN cannot radiate away, a momentum-
driven wind may exist even when most of the energy is gone. Then ṗ = ΛṀ V∞ ,
10 Veilleux, Cecil & Bland-Hawthorn
where ṗ is the sum of the radiation and mechanical momentum from the star-
burst or AGN. Outflow occurs if this exceeds the gravity of the host galaxy (e.g.,
Murray, Quataert, & Thompson 2005).
In more energetic outflows into a denser ISM, mass loading can cause RT
instabilities to culminate in repeated, large vortices that crush gas along shocks
as the bubble apex shreds. Elsewhere the wind flow can be almost adiabatic,
progressing so rapidly that the timescales for recombination, collisional ionization,
and excitation exceed greatly the dynamical time (Breitschwerdt & Schmutzler
1999). The gas soon becomes very convoluted, with a fractal size distribution
that Sutherland, Bicknell, & Dopita (2003a) show enhances cooling, hence shock
prominence, compared to steady-flow models.
Steady winds can develop a “stagnation ring shock” in the disk plane. Tenorio-
Tagle & Muñoz-Tuñón (1997, 1998) show how this shock becomes prominent
when the ram pressure of even diffuse H I augments the thermal pressure of the
enveloping gas. Wind fueling stalls the ring at constant radius, a result consistent
with the sparse kinematical data on ring shocks (§4.3). Feedback occurs because
the base of the wind controls the minimum mass accreted for the starburst to
maintain the wind, but computer limitations have thus far prevented coupling of
starburst and hydrodynamical codes of useful resolution.
In fact, most winds fail to develop a large-scale, steady flow. The small free-
wind zone is then bounded at smallest radius by a few cells of energy injection at
the base, and at largest radius by the boundary between dense clouds and their
upstream bow shocks that appear as elaborate filamentation at the resolution
imposed by the grid. Figures 2 and 3 show that the boundary emits most of the
soft X rays. Figure 1 is an example of a recent three-dimensional simulation that,
by detailing this region, promises to pin down the elusive X-ray filling factor.
The Galaxy and the Large Magellanic Cloud are excellent laboratories for de-
tailed studies of wind-blown events. The processes involved in these local events
are scaled down versions of superbubbles and GWs in starburst galaxies. We
summarize key features of these local laboratories in this section.
activity in Seyfert galaxies (∼1043 erg s−1 ). Hydro simulations (§2.4) show that a
central explosion of ∼ 1055−56 erg would provide mass Mcmz with sufficient radial
impulse to make the observed ring (Sanders 1989; Saito 1990).
In the next two sections, we present a census of galactic winds. Each newly
discovered outflow source provides different insights into the wind process, and
often reveals new and complex behavior. Therefore, it is necessary to summarize
what is known of the wind phenomenon in terms of basic observational parameters
(e.g. morphology, kinematics, energetics). The subject of galactic winds is largely
in its infancy; therefore a discussion of the phenomenology is warranted here. We
start by summarising the search techniques used to find outflow sources, the
limitations of each technique and the inferred detection rates.
energy is injected at the source, and the amount of gas in and around the host
galaxy. Winds ≪ 1041 erg s−1 would have little observable impact on the ISM of
an external galaxy.
The need to distinguish wind-related emission from the background favors de-
tection of highly inclined outflows in edge-on galaxies. This is true for most of the
well-known starburst-driven winds. In a few less inclined galaxies (e.g., NGC 253,
NGC 1808), outflows were first suspected on the basis of absorbing dust filaments
seen against the galaxy body (e.g., Phillips 1993). In NGC 253, extended Hα
filaments are projected onto disk H II regions, requiring detailed 3D kinemat-
ics to separate the different components. Similar blending occurs at X-ray and
radio wavelengths because compact sources are commonly associated with the
inner disk. In edge-on systems, kinematical deprojection leads to large uncer-
tainties in wind energetics. Other complications include uncertain dereddening
at the base of the outflow, relating the post-shock to the pre-shock velocities, and
high density bias introduced by the density-squared dependence of the emission
measure.
Absorption-line techniques have been used with great success to search for the
unambiguous wind signature of blueshifted absorbing material in front of the
continuum source. This method favors detection of winds in face-on systems and
therefore complements the emission technique. The equivalent width and profile
of the absorption line are used to estimate the amount of outflowing material
along the line of sight and to determine its projected kinematics. For an unsatu-
rated line, the column density of the absorbing material scales linearly with the
equivalent width of the line and therefore is arguably a better probe of the whole
range of density in the wind than the line or continuum emission. For saturated
lines, the change in equivalent width reflects primarily a change in the velocity
dispersion of the absorbing clouds, covering fraction or both.
UV interstellar absorption lines are useful. Low-ionization lines such as Si II
λ1260, O I + Si II λ1303, C II λ1334, Si II λ1526, Fe II λ1608, and Al II λ1670
are particularly well suited to avoid confusion with possible stellar photospheric
features of higher ionization (e.g., C III λ1176, O IV λ1343, S V λ1501) and
stellar wind features with P Cygni-type profiles (e.g., N V λλ1238, 1242, Si IV
λλ1393, 1402, C IV λλ1548, 1550, He II λ1640). A few key optical lines have also
been used in successful wind searches in z < ∼ 0.5 galaxies: Na I D λλ5890, 5896
and K I λλ7665, 7699. Extension to the far-UV domain with the Far Ultraviolet
Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) spacecraft has recently allowed the use of the OVI
λλ1032, 1038 lines to probe the coronal-phase (T = a few × 105 K) gas in GWs.
Such measurements constrain the amount of radiative cooling (see §4.5).
or extraplanar diffuse ionized gas (e.g., Heckman, Armus, & Miley 1990; Hunter,
Hawley, & Gallagher 1993; Pildis, Bregman, & Schombert 1994; Lehnert & Heck-
man 1995, 1996; Marlowe et al. 1995; Veilleux et al. 1995; Rand 1996; Hunter &
Gallagher 1997; Kim, Veilleux, & Sanders 1998; Martin 1998; Miller & Veilleux
2003a, 2003b; Rossa & Dettmar 2000, 2003a, 2003b; although see Meurer 2004).
Complementary results from systematic searches for blueshifted optical absorp-
tion lines (e.g., Heckman et al. 2000; Rupke, Veilleux, & Sanders 2002, 2005a,
2005b; Schwartz & Martin 2004; Martin 2005), complex UV emission and absorp-
tion lines (e.g., Lequeux et al. 1995; Kunth et al. 1998; Heckman et al. 1998;
Gonzalez Delgado et al. 1998), extended emission in soft X rays (e.g., Read,
Ponman, & Strickland 1997; Dahlem, Weaver, & Heckman 1998; Pietsch et al.
2000; McDowell et al. 2003; Ehle et al. 2004; Huo et al. 2004; Strickland et
al. 2004a, 2004b; Ehle 2005; Grimes et al. 2005) and at radio wavelengths (e.g.,
Hummel, Beck, & Dettmar 1991; Irwin, English, & Sorathia 1999; Irwin, Saikia,
& English 2000; Dahlem et al. 2001) all confirm this dependence on starburst
strength.
A key indicator is 60-to-100 µm IRAS color, S60 /S100 , which tracks dust tem-
perature in star-forming regions. “Warm” 60-to-100 µm IRAS color — S60 /S100 > ∼
0.4 — is often used to classify galaxies as starbursts. Warm galaxies generally
have large IR luminosities (> 10.5 L ), excesses (L /L
∼ 10 ⊙ IR opt >
∼ 2), and galaxy-
2
averaged far-IR (FIR) surface brightnesses (LFIR /πR25 > 40 −1 −2
∼ 2 × 10 erg s kpc ;
e.g., Rossa & Dettmar 2003a). This is not surprising because the SFR scales
with the IR luminosity according to equation (5), and the dust temperature is
expected to scale with the UV energy density. The conditions on the IR luminos-
ity and surface brightness in warm galaxies translate into SFR > −1
∼ 5 M⊙ yr and
SFR/πR25 2 > 0.001 M yr−1 kpc−2 . Almost all of these galaxies have extrapla-
⊙
nar ionized gas, and most also host a wind. More than 75% of ultraluminous IR
galaxies (ULIRGs) with IR luminosities > 1012 L⊙ (S60 /S100 > ∼ 0.5) have winds
(e.g., Rupke et al. 2002, 2005b; Martin 2005). The degree of nucleation of star
formation activity increases with SFR, so it is not surprising to detect so many
winds among ULIRGs (where SFR > −1
∼ 100 M⊙ yr and R∗ < 1 kpc).
4.3 Morphology
The outflows in most star-forming galaxies have a bipolar distribution perpen-
dicular to the disk. Opening angles are 2θ ≈ 10◦ – 45◦ near the base, increasing
to ∼ 45◦ – 100◦ above the disk as expected from simulations (§2.4). But the
detailed gas distribution is often complex, shows large galaxy-to-galaxy varia-
tions, and depends on the specific gas phase. In optical line emission, outflow
structures range from the classic egg-shaped nuclear superbubble of NGC 30791
(Fig. 3; Ford et al. 1986; Veilleux et al. 1994; Cecil et al. 2001) to the bipolar
double-loop morphology of Arp 220 (Heckman, Armus, & Miley 1987), the bicon-
1
NGC 3079 has both a nuclear starburst and an AGN, but from the morphology and kine-
matics of the line emitting gas, Cecil et al. (2001) conclude that this outflow is starburst, not
AGN, powered.
16 Veilleux, Cecil & Bland-Hawthorn
ical structure of M82 (Fig. 4; Bland & Tully 1988; Shopbell & Bland-Hawthorn
1998; Ohyama et al. 2002) and NGC 1482 (Fig. 5a; Veilleux & Rupke 2002), and
the frothy and filamentary morphology of the outflow in the dwarf NGC 1569
(e.g., Martin, Kobulnicky, & Heckman 2002). The line-emitting structures are
often limb-brightened, indicating that much of the optically emitting gas resides
on the surface of largely hollow structures. In the few objects examined with
the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) (∼ 0.′′ 1), the line-emitting gas is resolved into
complexes of clumps and filaments (e.g., M82) or streams of filamentary strands
and droplets (e.g., NGC 3079) with volume filling factors f > −3
∼ 10 . The mor-
phology and kinematics (discussed in §4.4) of this gas suggest that it originated
in the cool disk and became entrained in the outflow.
These structures vary in vertical extent from ∼ 1 kpc to >
∼ 20 kpc (see Veilleux
et al. 2003 and references therein). Large filaments seemingly unrelated to the
nuclear structure sometimes appear in deeper exposures; e.g., faint X-shaped
filaments extend > 8 kpc from the nucleus of NGC 3079 (Heckman et al. 1990;
Veilleux et al. 1994) and rise ∼ 4 kpc from the galactic plane but connect to the
inner (R ≈ 1.5 kpc) galactic disk rather than to the nucleus itself. Cecil et al.
(2001) suggest that these filaments have the shape expected (Schiano 1985) for the
contact discontinuity/ISM associated with lateral stagnation of the wind in the
galaxy thick disk/halo. The lateral extent of the wind is necessarily much smaller
in the disk, where one expects to find a “ring shock.” This feature (see §2.4) has
been detected in a few objects, based on line emission and warm molecular gas
emission (e.g., NGC 253: Sugai, Davies, & Ward 2003; see below).
A growing set of ∼ 1′′ -resolution CXO data show that the bright, soft X ray
and Hα filaments in these winds have strikingly similar patterns on both small
and large scales (∼ 0.01 – 10 kpc; e.g., Strickland et al. 2000, 2002, 2004a;
Cecil, Bland-Hawthorn, & Veilleux 2002a; McDowell et al. 2003). This tight
optical-line/X-ray match seems to arise from cool disk gas that has been driven
by the wind, with X rays being emitted from upstream, standoff bow shocks or
by conductive cooling at the cloud/wind interfaces. This is not always the case
for the fainter soft X-ray emission. For instance, the X-ray emission near the
X-shaped filaments of NGC 3079 (Fig. 3a) is not significantly edge brightened,
suggesting a partially filled volume of warm gas within the shocked wind, not
a shell of conductively heated gas (Cecil, Bland-Hawthorn, & Veilleux 2002; see
also Huo et al. 2004; Ott, Walter, & Brinks 2005). In a few objects, absorption
by foreground neutral ISM also affects the distribution of the soft X-ray emission
(e.g., NGC 253: Strickland et al. 2000; M82: Stevens, Read, & Bravo-Guerrero
2003). Intrinsically hard, diffuse X-ray emission has been detected in a few wind
galaxies. In M82, this gas is more nucleated but less filamentary than the soft
X-ray emission; it probably traces the hot, high-pressure wind fluid (Griffiths et
al. 2000; Stevens et al. 2003; see §4.9 for more detail).
Several wind galaxies have large radio halos (e.g., M82: Z ≈ 5 kpc, Seaquist
& Odegard 1991; NGC 253: ∼ 9 kpc, Carilli et al. 1992; NGC 3079: ∼ 11
kpc, Irwin & Saikia 2003; NGC 4631: ∼ 9 kpc, Hummel & Dettmar 1990).
Galaxies with thick ionized disks (S60 /S100 > 0.4) also tend to show extrapla-
Galactic Winds 17
nar synchrotron radio emission (e.g., Dahlem et al. 2001). Given the significant
polarization of the radio emission and the lack of point-by-point correspondence
with the X-ray and optical line emission, non-thermal synchrotron from magne-
tized (B ≈ few × 10µG), relativistic electrons is the favored explanation for most
of the radio emission. The pattern of magnetic field lines in NGC 3079 (Cecil et
al. 2001) suggests that the relativistic electrons are produced in the starburst-
ing disk and then advected from the disk by the wind. Some emission may also
come from electrons accelerated locally in internal wind shocks. Steepening of
the spectral index of the radio continuum emission in M82 (Seaquist & Odegard
1991), NGC 253 (Carilli et al. 1992), NGC 4631 (Ekers & Sancisi 1977; Hummel
1991) and NGC 891 (Allen, Sancisi, & Baldwin 1978; Hummel 1991) indicates
energy losses of the electrons on their way from the starburst, either from syn-
chrotron losses or inverse Compton scattering of the relativistic electrons against
the IR photons produced in the nuclear region. In some objects, the relativistic
component of the wind appears to decouple from the thermal component beyond
the Hα-emitting structures (e.g., NGC 3079, Duric & Seaquist 1988), perhaps
participating in a “cosmic ray wind” rather than a thermal wind (Breitschwerdt
& Schmutzler 1999).
Unambiguous evidence for entrained neutral gas has been detected from dwarf
galaxies (e.g., Puche et al. 1992; Stewart et al. 2000; Schwartz & Martin 2004)
to ULIRGs (e.g., Heckman et al. 2000; Rupke et al. 2002, 2005a, 2005b; Mar-
tin 2005). This gas often extends up to several kiloparsec, but morphological
constraints are sparse. Detailed long-slit spectra show some degree of correlation
with the warm ionized gas (§4.4). Kinematically disturbed molecular gas has also
been detected in a few GWs. The best case for molecular gas entrained in a GW
is in M82, where a detailed kinematical decomposition of the CO gas into wind
and disk components reveals a wide-angle (opening angle 2θ ≈ 110◦ ) pattern
related loosely to the outflow seen at other wavelengths (Stark & Carlson 1984;
Seaquist & Clark 2001; Walter, Weiss, & Scoville 2002). A narrow, shock-excited
SiO chimney extends ∼ 500 pc above the disk (Garcia-Burillo et al. 2001), and is
also found in NGC 253 (Garcia-Burillo et al. 2000). Shocked H2 gas is detected
at the base of the outflow of NGC 253 (Sugai et al. 2003), consistent with the
cloud-crushing model of Cowie, McKee, & Ostriker (1981) and Ohyama, Yoshida,
& Takata (2003) where C-type shocks with Vshock < −1
∼ 40 km s are compressing
the star-forming molecular disk.
GW structures sometimes tilt relative to the minor axis of the host, and are
asymmetric to the nucleus. Tilts and asymmetries near the starbursts (M82:
Shopbell & Bland-Hawthorn 1998; Galaxy: Bland-Hawthorn & Cohen 2003;
NGC 253: Sugai et al. 2003) probably reflect asymmetries in the starbursting
population and in the density distribution of the cool, star-forming disk. Asym-
metries on large scales may be due to density fluctuations in the halo of the host
galaxy, and therefore can be a probe. The IGM through which the galaxy is
moving may also influence the morphology of the wind structure on large scales
(e.g., radio halo in M82, Seaquist & Odegard 1991).
18 Veilleux, Cecil & Bland-Hawthorn
4.4 Kinematics
Spectra of the warm ionized component in GWs shows double-peaked emission-
line profiles with a split ranging from a few 10’s of km s−1 in some dwarf galaxies
(e.g., Marlowe et al. 1995; Martin 1998) to about 1500 km s−1 in NGC 3079
(Filippenko & Sargent 1992; Veilleux et al. 1994). Constraints on the phase-
space distribution of gas within the outflows are necessary to deproject observed
velocities. The dense 2D spatial coverage of Fabry–Perot and IF spectrometers
is ideal, but usually only narrow-band imaging and long-slit spectroscopy are
available to constrain the outflow geometry. The observed kinematic patterns
indicate that most warm gas lies on the surface of expanding bubbles/ellipsoids
or flows along the walls of conical structures. The substantial broadening often
seen in individual kinematic components indicates that the flow is not purely
laminar or that the cone walls are composites of distinct filaments with a range
of velocities.
The most detailed studies of outflow kinematics can be compared quantitatively
with the hydro simulations described in §2.4. The deprojected outflow velocity in
open-ended conical winds often increases with radius as expected for entrained gas
in a free-flowing wind (e.g., Murray et al. 2005); examples are M82 (Shopbell &
Bland-Hawthorn 1998) and NGC 3079. Gas near the top of the partially ruptured
bubble of NGC 3079 is entrained in a mushroom vortex (Cecil et al. 2001), as
predicted theoretically (e.g., Suchkov et al. 1994). In these open-ended winds,
there is a clear correlation between outflow velocity and gas phase temperature.
For example, cool molecular gas is ejected out of M82 at a maximum deprojected
outflow velocity of ∼ 230 km s−1 (Shen & Lo 1995; Walter et al. 2002), well
below the inferred velocities of the warm ionized gas (525 – 655 km s−1 ; Shopbell
& Bland-Hawthorn 1998). Coronal gas traced by the O VI λ1032 absorption
line in NGC 1705 is more blueshifted than the neutral gas, whereas the warm
photoionized gas appears to have intermediate velocities (Heckman et al. 2001a).
Smaller outflow velocities in the neutral gas relative to the ionized components
are also often seen in LIRGs and ULIRGs (Rupke et al. 2005b). These systematic
kinematic variations with phase temperature are consistent with entrainment of
gas clouds by a hot wind if the warmer phase has smaller column densities than
the cool gas, perhaps as a result of cloud erosion (§2.4).
Entrainment of disk material is supported by other evidence, including the
detection of rotation in the outflow gas (e.g., M82: Shopbell & Bland-Hawthorn
1998, Greve 2004; NGC 3079: Veilleux et al. 1994; NGC 1482: Veilleux & Rupke
2002) and the field reversal across the NGC 3079 radio lobe that suggests the
return of entrained, magnetized material to the disk (Cecil et al. 2001).
Wind kinematics are poorly constrained. This fluid, being hot and tenuous
(§4.9 and Equation [8]), is hard to detect, so current X-ray instruments do not
constrain its velocity. A lower limit follows from the expected terminal velocity
of an adiabatic wind at the measured X-ray temperature TX : VW 2 ≃ α c2 =
s
α kTX /µmp , where cs is the isothermal sound speed of the hot phase, µmp , the
mean mass per particle, and α = 2.5 − 5.0, a scale factor that depends on the
Galactic Winds 19
of the outflow, but contributes very little to the emission (Strickland & Stevens
2000). Corrections must be applied for the volume filling factor, f . Constraints
on f can be derived from estimates on the volume of the emitting material and
assumptions about its emissivity (temperature). Measurements that rely on ab-
sorbing column densities are less subject to density inhomogeneities, but require
a strong source of background light and therefore are limited to the brightest
parts of the starburst. Assumptions about filling factor and outflow extent must
then be made to estimate the mass of outflowing material and the energetics.
After deprojecting observed velocities, the dynamical timescales of starburst-
driven outflows (tdyn ≈ R/Vout ) range from 0.1 to 10 Myr. The mass of warm
ionized gas inferred to take part in the outflow is ∼ 105 – 106 M⊙ in dwarf galaxies
and ∼ 105 – 107 M⊙ in powerful starbursts. The dynamical timescales yield mass
outflow rates ranging from < −1 −1
∼ 0.1 M⊙ yr to > ∼ 10 M⊙ yr , with a trend for
the rate to increase with increasing SFR. A similar trend may exist between star
formation activity and the amount of extraplanar gas in non-starburst galaxies
(e.g., Dettmar 1992; Rand, Kulkarni, & Hester 1992; Miller & Veilleux 2003a;
Rossa & Dettmar 2003a).
Bulk plus “turbulent” KEs inferred from optical emission-line spectra span a
broad range: e.g., NGC 1482: > 53
∼ 2×10 erg (Veilleux & Rupke 2002); NGC 3079:
∼ 1054 erg (Cecil et al. 2001); M82: ∼ 2 × 1055 erg (Shopbell & Bland-Hawthorn
1998). These are typically several times lower than thermal energies derived
from X-ray data. Luminosities of galactic X-ray halos scale roughly with IR
luminosities or disk SFRs (Strickland et al. 2004a, 2004b), but the corresponding
X-ray cooling rates amount to < ∼ 10% of the SN heating rates in these objects.
Cooling by the optical line-emitting material is even smaller.
Results from Na I D studies suggest that GWs entrain considerable neutral
material, ∼ 104 −107 M⊙ (0.001 – 1.0 M⊙ yr−1 ) in dwarfs and ∼ 108 −1010 M⊙ (∼
10 – 1000 M⊙ yr−1 ) in ULIRGs. These rates generally exceed the mass injection
rate from SNe (Equation [1]). However, they are highly uncertain because: (1)
the geometry of the neutral outflow is poorly known (here the simple model of a
mass-conserving free wind from Rupke et al. 2005b is used with the assumption
that gas lies in a thin shell at a radius ∼ 5 kpc for the large starbursts; and at
smaller radii for the dwarfs; the estimated masses scale linearly with this radius);
(2) depletion of Na onto grains affects the strength of the Na I D absorption line
(here we assume a depletion factor ∼ 9); (3) the ionization potential of Na is
low (5.139 eV) so considerable Na is ionized even when hydrogen is neutral; this
must be accounted for when calculating H0 masses (the ionization correction is
assumed to be close to the Galactic value of ∼ 10).
Assuming that these estimates of neutral gas masses are correct, the ratios of
Ṁ to the global SFRs span η ≡ Ṁ /SFR ≈ 0.01 − 10, consistent with those found
by Martin (1999) for the warm ionized medium of ten galaxies. Parameter η, the
mass entrainment efficiency, shows no obvious dependence on SFR except perhaps
for a decreasing trend at high SFR (> −1
∼ 10 – 100 M⊙ yr ). The inferred KE
increases with increasing SFR: ∼ 1050 − 1054 erg among dwarfs but ∼ 1056 − 1059
erg among LIRGs and ULIRGs; corresponding power outputs are ∼ 1036 − 1039
Galactic Winds 21
and 1041 − 1044 erg s−1 , respectively. Such energies and powers exceed those of
the outflowing warm ionized gas, and imply thermalization efficiencies > ∼ 10%.
Contrary to some expectations (e.g., Silk 2003), the trend with SFR flattens
among ULIRGs, perhaps due to the complete evacuation of the gas in the wind’s
path, a common neutral gas terminal velocity for LIRGs and ULIRGs, and/or a
decrease in the efficiency of thermalization of the SN energy.
CO studies of GWs are very important because so much mass is required to
see molecular gas that its detection dramatically increases the inferred energies.
A good illustration is M82: Walter et al. (2002) deduced from CO observations
that > 3× 108 M⊙ of H2 is involved in the outflow, and its KE ∼ 1055 erg
becomes comparable to the KE in the warm filaments. We discussed in §3.2
the GW of the Milky Way, where cold material seems to dominate the KE of
the outflow. Detailed millimeter studies of a representative set of GWs will be
needed to confirm the dynamical importance of the molecular gas component.
The latest addition to the mass and energy budgets of GWs is the coronal
(T ∼ 105 K) phase traced by O VI. Dynamical information on this component is
currently sketchy, outflowing gas being detected in absorption in only two (dwarf)
galaxies so far: NGC 1705 (vout ≈ 100 km s−1 ; Sahu & Blades 1997; Heckman &
Leitherer 1997; Heckman et al. 2001) and NGC 625 (vout ≈ 30 km s−1 ; Cannon et
al. 2005). The mass of coronal gas derived from these data is uncertain because
of possible line saturation, ionization corrections, and assumptions on the gas
geometry. In NGC 1569, Heckman et al. (2001a) estimate a mass of ∼ 6 × 105
M⊙ and KE of ∼ 3 × 1052 erg in the coronal phase. These are only ∼ 1% of
the values in the warm ionized phase, so the coronal component is unimportant
dynamically. But what about its radiative losses? The O VI λλ1032, 1038 lines
are key because they produce ∼ 30% of the coronal cooling. O VI emission was
detected in NGC 4631 (Otte et al. 2003), but not in NGC 1705 (Heckman et
al. 2001a), M82 (Hoopes et al. 2003), and NGC 891 (Otte et al. 2003). These
measurements limit the radiative cooling of coronal gas to 10 – 20% of the SN
heating rate in these objects. To within a factor of 2, this is identical to the
cooling rate of the X-ray-emitting gas.
high-latitude hot gas above the disk can actually help the outflow to escape.
A popular way to estimate the escape fraction is to compare the outflow velocity
with the local escape velocity derived from a gravitational model of the host
galaxy. This is often a simple, truncated isothermal sphere. If truncated at rmax ,
then the escape velocity
√ vesc at radius r is related to the rotation speed vc and
1
rmax by vesc (r) = 2 vc [1 + ln(rmax /r)] 2 . The escape velocity is not sensitive
to the exact value of rmax /r [e.g., for rmax /r = 10 − 100, vesc ≈ (2.6 − 3.3) × vc ].
The curve in Figure 6a is for rmax /r = 10. If halo drag is tiny, material that
exceeds vesc may escape into the IGM. With this simple assumption, Rupke et
al. (2005b) find that ∼ 5 − 10% of the neutral material in starburst-driven winds
will escape. This may only be a lower limit: much of the gas above vesc may have
already mixed with the IGM and would be invisible in Na I D absorption.
Given the correlation between outflow velocity and gas-phase temperature men-
tioned in §4.4, the escape fraction is surely larger for warm and hot phases. In-
deed, warm gas in several dwarfs (including possibly M82) exceeds escape (e.g.,
Martin 1998; Devine & Bally 1999; Lehnert, Heckman, & Weaver 1999). Sim-
ilarly, velocities derived in §4.4 from X-ray temperatures, Vw ≈ 500 – 900 km
s−1 , exceed escape for galaxies with vc ≈ 130 − 300 km s−1 . Recall that these are
lower limits to the wind terminal velocities, so galaxies with vc < −1
∼ 130 km s may
not retain hot, metal-enriched material (Martin 1999). As discussed in §7.1.2,
this galaxy-mass dependence on metal retention makes definite predictions on
the effective yield which appears to have been confirmed by observations.
Strickland et al. 2000). The best evidence for it is in M82 (Griffiths et al. 2000;
Stevens et al. 2003), where the hottest gas is < ∼ 75 pc from the center, and has
7 9 −3
T ∼ 4 × 10 K and pressure P/k ≃ 10 K cm if the X rays are mostly thermal
(Griffiths et al. 2000). Then the hot fluid is overpressured relative to the disk
ISM and drives the large-scale wind.
Hard (1 – 6 keV) X-ray emission is resolved in the dwarf galaxy NGC 1569
(Martin et al. 2002) and its temperature exceeds escape velocity (∼ 80 – 110
km s−1 ; Martin 1999). Interestingly, the spectral softening of X rays with radius
that is expected from adiabatically cooling winds (e.g., Chevalier & Clegg 1985)
is not seen, perhaps because of large mass loading.
The metal content of the X-ray-emitting gas may constrain mass loading, al-
though significant theoretical and observational uncertainties remain. As dis-
cussed in §2.1.1, SN explosions are expected to dominate when GWs develop.
So, the metallicity of the wind fluid is regulated by SNe yields. Unfortunately,
the oxygen and iron yields of massive stars are only known to an accuracy of
∼ 2 − 3 because of uncertainties in the critical 12 C(α, γ)16 O reaction rate, and
on the mass limit above which stars do not contribute to the yield (considerable
reimplosion of heavy elements may affect stars of > ∼ 30 M⊙ ; e.g., Woosley &
Weaver 1995). Determining the metallicity of X-ray-emitting gas observationally
is notoriously difficult because of uncertainties in the atomic physics and because
of the degeneracies inherent in fitting multi-component spectral models to data
of low spectral resolution. The X-ray-emitting gas is a multi-phase medium with
a range of temperatures, densities, and absolute/relative metal abundances, pos-
sibly located behind cool absorbing material of unknown metallicity and column
density. The problem is therefore under-constrained and one must assume many
unknowns. Presently there seems to be evidence that the α/Fe ratio is slightly
super-solar in the inner wind of M82 (Stevens et al. 2003; Strickland et al. 2004a)
and in the wind filaments of NGC 1569 (Martin et al. 2002), as expected if stellar
ejecta from SNe II contribute to the wind fluid. If confirmed, these modest α/Fe
enrichments would further support the idea that mass loading by disk material
contributes significantly to the X-ray emission (recall the kinematic evidence for
disk mass loading in §4.4). Martin et al. (2002) compared these measurements
with predictions from SNe models of Woosley & Weaver (1995) to estimate a
mass-loading factor of ∼ 10 in NGC 1569.
4.10 Dust
Evidence is mounting that dust is often entrained in GWs (dust in the wind of
our Galaxy was discussed in §3.2). Far-IR maps of a few GWs show extended
cold dust emission along the galaxy minor axis, suggesting entrainment (e.g.,
Hughes, Robson, & Gear 1990; Hughes, Gear, & Robson 1994; Alton, Davies, &
Bianchi 1999; Radovich, Kahanpää, & Lemke 2001). Color maps reveal elevated
dust filaments in several GWs (e.g., NGC 1808: Phillips 1993; M82: Ichikawa et
al. 1994; NGC 253: Sofue, Wakamatsu, & Malin 1994; NGC 3079: Cecil et al.
2001). In a few systems, including M82, extended polarized emission along the
Galactic Winds 25
outflow axis indicates dust (e.g., Schmidt, Angel, & Cromwell 1976; Scarrott et
al. 1991, 1993; Alton et al. 1994; Draper et al. 1995). Extended red emission,
a broad emission band commonly seen in Galactic reflection nebulae, exists in
the halo of M82 (Perrin, Darbon, & Sivan 1995; Gordon, Witt, & Friedmann
1998). Far-UV maps of M82 made with the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope reveal
a UV-bright southern cone that is consistent with scattering by dust in the wind
(e.g., Marcum et al. 2001); recent Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) data
confirm this conclusion (Hoopes et al. 2005). Other support for dusty outflows
comes from the strong correlation between nuclear color excesses, E(B − V ), and
the equivalent widths of blueshifted low-ionization lines in star-forming galaxies
at low redshifts (e.g., Armus, Heckman, & Miley 1989; Veilleux et al. 1995b;
Heckman et al. 2000).
Optical measurements can estimate dust masses if one knows the geometry of
the dust filaments and the amount of foreground starlight and forward scattering.
The dust mass in an outflow can best be estimated from far-IR data, despite un-
certainties associated with the disk/halo decomposition and assumptions about
the dust temperature distribution and emissivity law. Alton et al. (1999) esti-
mate that ∼ 2 – 10 × 106 M⊙ of dust is outflowing from M82. Radovich et al.
(2001) used the same technique to derive 0.5 – 3 × 106 M⊙ of outflow into the
halo of NGC 253. The dynamical times yield dust outflow rates of ∼ 1 M⊙ yr−1 .
The fate of this dust is uncertain; there are no direct constraints on its kine-
matics in outflows. However, the short sputtering timescale for silicate/graphite
dust in GWs (e.g., Popescu et al. 2000; see also Aguirre 1999) suggests that
grains of diameter < ∼ 0.3µm would not survive long if in direct contact with the
wind. Moreover, there does not seem to be a tight spatial correlation between the
extraplanar warm ionized medium of starbursts and quiescent galaxies and the
dust filaments (e.g., Cecil et al. 2001; Rossa et al. 2004). Most likely, the dust
is embedded in the neutral or molecular component of the outflow and shares its
kinematics. Assuming a Galactic gas-to-dust ratio, the neutral gas outflow rates
in LIRGs and ULIRGs (Rupke et al. 2005b) translate into dust outflow rates of ∼
0.1 – 10 M⊙ yr−1 . Given the kinematics of the neutral gas and assuming no halo
drag, ∼ 5 − 10% of the entrained dust may escape the host galaxy. Wind-driven
ejection of dust from galaxies may feed the reservoir of intergalactic dust (e.g.,
Stickel et al. 1998, 2002), although tidal interactions and ram-pressure stripping
are also efficient conveyors of dust into the ICM of rich clusters.
The same methods detect outflows in nearby active galaxies and starburst-driven
winds, so the same selection effects and observational limitations discussed in §4.1
apply. However, contrary to starburst-driven winds, winds associated with AGN
need not be perpendicular to the galactic disk. Outflows directed close to the
galactic disk are likely to be made very luminous by the high ambient densities.
They are more easily observed in near face-on galaxies (e.g., M51: Cecil 1988;
26 Veilleux, Cecil & Bland-Hawthorn
NGC 1068: Cecil, Bland, & Tully 1990). In a few systems, the orientation of an
inclined AGN disk can be determined independently from maser spots.
bert et al. (1996a) found that > 25% have kinematic signatures of outflows or
extraplanar line emission out to > ∼ 1 kpc. The existence of extraplanar radio
emission in 60% (6/10) supports this claim (Colbert et al. 1996b). Morphology
and orientation suggest that this emission comes mainly from AGN-driven out-
flows (see §5.2). This detection rate is a lower limit because of sensitivity and
selection effects. For instance, Baum et al. (1993) detected kiloparsec-scale ex-
tranuclear radio emission in ∼ 90% (12/13) of their objects, a sample of slightly
more powerful, face-on Seyferts. The difference in detection rate may be due
to small number statistics, differences in sample selection, or may indicate that
some of this emission is associated with starburst-driven winds. Contamination
by starburst-driven winds may also explain the large fraction (11/12 ≈ 90%) of
starburst/Seyfert 2 composites with extended X-ray emission (Levenson, Weaver,
& Heckman 2001a, 2001b). There is now irrefutable evidence that powerful AGN-
driven outflows sometimes coexist with starburst-driven winds (e.g., NGC 3079:
Cecil et al. 2001).
5.2 Morphology
Contrary to what we know of starburst-driven winds, AGN outflows are oriented
randomly relative to the major axis of the host galaxy (e.g., Ulvestad & Wil-
son 1984; Kinney et al. 2000). Several well-known active galaxies, including
NGC 1068 (Cecil et al. 1990), harbor a wide-angle outflow whose axis is not per-
pendicular to the galaxy disks and therefore interacts strongly with the disk ISM.
Outflows near the disk plane are often well collimated (e.g., NGC 4258: Cecil et
al 2000; ESO 428-G14: Falcke, Wilson, & Simpson 1998), until they collide with
dense disk clouds or until they rise into the halo (e.g., NGC 4258: Wilson, Yang,
& Cecil 2001). When the jet is drilling through the disk, detailed correspondence
between radio and optical emission-line features indicates strong jet/ISM inter-
actions over tens of pc (e.g., Falcke et al. 1998; Schmitt et al. 2003a, 2003b and
references therein). The radio jets compress and shock ambient gas, enhancing
line emission that may dominate the morphology of the NLR. The well-known
correlation between radio and NLR luminosities supports a dynamical connection
between the two (e.g., de Bruyn & Wilson 1978; Wilson & Willis 1980). A few
jet deflections by ISM clouds are also seen (e.g., NGC 1068: Gallimore, Baum,
& O’Dea 1996b; NGC 4258: Cecil et al. 2000; NGC 4151: Mundell et al. 2003).
Jet/ISM interaction has also been mapped in X rays thanks to CXO (e.g., Young,
Wilson, & Shopbell 2001; Wilson et al. 2001; Yang, Wilson, & Ferruit 2001).
In many edge-on systems, the radio structure has a linear or elongated mor-
phology on subkiloparsec scale, but beyond the disk becomes more diffuse and
wide-angled. The change may arise from the vertical pressure gradient in the
surrounding ISM or from momentum loss within the sub-kpc NLR. The mor-
phologies of the warm and hot ionized extraplanar gas are often correlated. They
are distributed in a broad cone near the base of the outflow (e.g., NGC 2992: Col-
bert et al. 1998; Allen et al. 1999; Veilleux, Shopbell, & Miller 2001; Circinus:
Veilleux & Bland-Hawthorn 1997; Smith & Wilson 2001) but become filamentary
28 Veilleux, Cecil & Bland-Hawthorn
above the disk (e.g., NGC 4388: Veilleux et al. 1999, Fig. 5c; NGC 5506: Wilson,
Baldwin, & Ulvestad 1985). Spectacular bow shocks and finger-like structures
are seen optically in the Circinus galaxy, perhaps due to the abnormally high gas
content of this object (Fig. 5d; Veilleux & Bland-Hawthorn 1997). The correspon-
dence between the extraplanar radio plasma and optical line-emitting material
is often not as tight as that seen in the disk. Outflows with optical conical ge-
ometries may have very different radio morphologies: e.g., edge-brightened radio
bubbles in NGC 2992 (Wehrle & Morris 1988) and Circinus (Elmouttie et al.
1998) but lumpy and filamentary radio structures in NGC 4388 and NGC 5506
(Colbert et al. 1996b). The extraplanar emission at radio wavelengths (where
the foreground disk barely influences the emission) is sometimes lop-sided (e.g.,
NGC 4388) from asymmetric energy injection at the source or from asymmetric
ISM on small scales.
5.3 Kinematics
Spatially resolved outflows are found on all scales in AGN. Relativistic outflows
on parsec scales in powerful radio-loud sources are well established (Zensus 1997;
Worrall & Birkinshaw 2004 and references therein). Recently, proper motions
of radio components have been measured with VLBI in a few Seyfert galaxies
(e.g., Middelberg et al. 2004 and references therein). These studies show that
the outward motion of the radio components in these objects is non-relativistic
(<
∼ 0.25c) on pc scales. There is now unambiguous kinematic evidence that these
radio jets transfer momentum and energy to the ambient gas and drive some of
the large-scale outflows seen in radio-quiet and radio-loud objects.
Gas in the NLR (∼ 10 pc − 1 kpc) and extended NLR (ENLR; > ∼ 1 kpc) is
an excellent tracer of this jet/ISM interaction. The good match between nu-
clear emission-line widths and bulge gravitational velocities suggests that the
gravitational component dominates in most Seyferts (Whittle 1985; Wilson &
Heckman 1985; Veilleux 1991; Whittle 1992b; Nelson & Whittle 1996). But
Seyferts with linear radio structures have long been known to have emission lines
with complex profiles (e.g., Veilleux 1991) and supervirial velocity widths (e.g.,
Whittle 1992a) that implicate an additional source of KE in the NLR. Detailed
long-slit spectra from the ground and from HST have presented evidence for a
dynamical connection between the NLR and radio components in many of these
galaxies (e.g., Whittle & Wilson 2004 and references therein). The complete
spatio-kinematic coverage afforded by Fabry–Perot and integral-field spectrome-
ters has constrained efficiently the intrinsic, 3D velocity fields of the outflowing
ionized gas (e.g., Ferruit et al. 2004; Veilleux et al. 2002a and references therein).
The signatures of jet-driven kinematics seen in some Seyfert galaxies are also de-
tected in several powerful radio sources, particularly in compact steep-spectrum
radio galaxies and quasars (e.g., Baum, Heckman, & van Breugel 1992; Gelder-
man & Whittle 1994; McCarthy, Baum, & Spinrad 1996; Best, Röttgering, &
Longair 2000; Solórzano-Iñarrea, Tadhunter, & Axon 2001; O’Dea et al. 2002).
This large data set indicates that expanding radio lobes (Pedlar, Dyson, &
Galactic Winds 29
Unger 1985) or bow shocks/cocoons driven by radio jets (Taylor, Dyson, & Axon
1992; Ferruit et al. 1997; Steffen et al. 1997a, 1997b) accelerate some of the
line-emitting gas to ∼ 100 – 1000 km s−1 . The fate of the gas clouds — whether
undisturbed, destroyed, or accelerated — depends on factors such as the cloud
mass, jet energy flux, and interaction geometry. Dense, molecular clouds in
Seyfert galaxies can deflect radio jets by a significant angle without experiencing
significant damage (e.g., NGC 1068: Gallimore et al. 1996a, 1996b; NGC 4258:
Cecil et al. 2000). Jet-cloud interactions can be used to deduce key properties
of the jet. In their analysis of the jet-molecular cloud interaction in the NLR of
NGC 1068, Bicknell et al. (1998) argued that this jet (and perhaps those in other
Seyferts) is heavily loaded with thermal gas and has low bulk velocities (∼ 0.06c),
contrary to jets in powerful radio galaxies. Not surprisingly, the jets in Seyfert
galaxies often deposit an important fraction of their KE well within ∼ 1 kpc of the
nucleus. The radial velocities of the emission-line knots in the NLRs of Seyfert
galaxies show a slight tendency to increase out to ∼ 100 pc from the nucleus then
decrease beyond, whereas the line widths of the knots decrease monotonically
with increasing distance from the nucleus (e.g., Crenshaw & Kraemer 2000; Ruiz
et al. 2005). Deceleration beyond ∼ 100 pc is likely due to drag from ambient
gas.
Ram pressure from radio jets/lobes may not always dominate the acceleration
of line-emitting gas in Seyfert galaxies. High-resolution studies with HST some-
times fail to find a one-to-one correspondence between the NLR cloud kinematics
and the positions of the radio knots. Ram pressure from a diffuse, highly ion-
ized wind or radiation pressure by the AGN radiation field has been suggested
as the possible culprit in these cases (Kaiser et al. 2000; Ruiz et al. 2001). The
high-velocity (∼ 3000 km s−1 ) line-emitting knots detected in NGC 1068 (Cecil
et al. 2002b; Groves et al. 2004) may be explained by radiation pressure acting
on dust grains in the clouds (Dopita et al. 2002). These knots may correspond
to the well-known absorbers seen projected on the UV continua of some AGN
(Crenshaw et al. 2003). Bright nuclear emission-line knots detected in several
other nearby Seyfert galaxies may also contribute to the population of intrinsic
UV absorbers (Crenshaw & Kraemer 2005; Ruiz et al. 2005).
Wind ram pressure or radiation pressure may also be responsible for blueshifted
(∼ 100 – 1000 km s−1 ) neutral material detected in several AGN-dominated
ULIRGs (Rupke, Veilleux, & Sanders 2005c), because few of them show jet-
like radio structures. There is some evidence for higher average and maximum
velocities in Seyfert-2 ULIRGs than in starburst-dominated ULIRGs, although
the evidence for a strong influence of the AGN on these outflows is inconclusive.
The situation is quite different among Seyfert-1 ULIRGs, where the outflows are
driven mostly or solely by the AGN (Rupke, Veilleux, & Sanders 2005c; Fig.
6a). Similarly, nuclear activity is almost certainly responsible for the broad,
blueshifted H I absorption wings detected in a growing number of compact radio
galaxies. But here, jet-driven acceleration is implied (e.g., Morganti et al. 2003).
In Seyferts where the energy injection rate of the jet or wind suffices to eject
radio/thermal plasma from the host galaxy, warm line-emitting gas is entrained
30 Veilleux, Cecil & Bland-Hawthorn
into wide-angle outflows. The intrinsic, 3D velocity field of the line-emitting gas
over >∼ 1 kpc indicates roughly conical radial outflow with opening angles 2θ ≈
60 − 135◦ and hollow (NGC 1365: Hjelm & Lindblad 1996; NGC 2992: Veilleux
◦
et al. 2001), partially filled (NGC 5506: Wilson et al. 1985), or filamentary
geometry (Circinus: Veilleux & Bland-Hawthorn 1997; NGC 4388: Veilleux et
al. 1999). Deprojected velocities are ∼ 100 – 500 km s−1 in Seyferts, sometimes
larger in radio galaxies. The geometry of the kinematic structures on large scales
depends not only on the energy source but also on the galactic and intergalactic
environment (e.g., the abnormally large gas content of Circinus may explain the
peculiar filamentary morphology of its outflow). Rotation is sometimes detected
in the velocity field of the outflowing gas (e.g., Circinus: Veilleux & Bland-
Hawthorn 1997; NGC 2992: Veilleux et al. 2001), confirming that most of the
line-emitting material comes from the disk ISM.
γ/(γ − 1)P V ∼ 1058 − 1061 erg, where P and V are the pressure and volume
of the radio lobes, respectively, and γ = 4/3 is the mean adiabatic index of
the relativistic fluid. Much of the energy dissipated by the AGN accretion disk
appears to find its way into jet mechanical luminosity: powerful radio sources are
Eddington-tuned engines with jet powers Q ∼ 0.1 LEdd (Willott et al. 1999; see
also Falcke, Malkan, & Biermann 1995).
Outflowing neutral gas detected in absorption in H I and Na I D in many
AGN may add significant energy. Unfortunately, the mass of entrained neutral
gas in these objects is poorly constrained because its location is unknown. The
mass-conserving wind model of Rupke et al. (2005b; Router = 5 kpc) applied to
the Na I D absorption data on Seyfert 2 ULIRGs yields neutral mass outflow
rates similar to those in starburst-driven winds, i.e. ∼ 10 – 1000 M⊙ yr−1 . With
this assumption, neutral-gas KEs and rates of ∼ 1056 – 1060 erg and Ekin /tdyn ≈
1041 −1045 erg s−1 are derived for Seyfert-2 ULIRGs, suggesting that this material
may be a very important dynamical component of AGN-driven outflows.
ionized inner edge of the torus (Gallimore, Baum, & O’Dea 1997). Regardless of
the exact origin of the emission, the compact flat-spectrum component is thought
to be the main energy source of the outflow, because of frequent alignment of the
various radio components and from direct measurements of proper motions in a
few objects (Middelberg et al. 2004 and references therein; see §5.3 above).
5.7 Dust
Dust is present in AGN outflows. Its reddening is evident in the narrow-line spec-
trum of radio-quiet and radio-loud galaxies (e.g., Osterbrock 1989 and references
therein) and in the broad absorption line clouds of BAL QSOs (e.g., Crenshaw
et al. 2003 and references therein). Dust has often been invoked to explain the
extended blue wings in the narrow-line profiles (e.g, Veilleux 1991 and references
therein), and in the IR continuum emission of several AGN (Barvainis 1987;
Sanders et al. 1989; Pier & Krolik 1992). But more relevant to outflowing dust
is that the correlation between color excess, E(B − V ), and the strength of the
Na I D line noted for starburst galaxies is even stronger for AGN (Veilleux et al.
1995b). Dust outflow rates of ∼ 0.1 – 10 M⊙ yr−1 are inferred from the neutral-
gas mass outflow rates discussed in §5.4, assuming the Galactic gas-to-dust ratio.
These are comparable to the dust outflow rates in starburst galaxies (§4.10).
at z >∼ 2 (e.g., Smail et al. 2003; Swinbank et al. 2005). Lyα emission with red
asymmetric or P Cygni-type profiles is also commonly seen in z > ∼ 5 Lyα-emitting
galaxies (e.g., Dey et al. 1998; Ellis et al. 2001; Dawson et al. 2002; Ajiki et al.
2002). A few isolated z > 1 line-emitting “blobs” and extended circumnuclear
nebulae with complex structured velocity fields have been tentatively interpreted
as spatially resolved large-scale winds driven by starbursts or AGNs (e.g., Francis
et al. 2001; Ohyama, Taniguchi, & Shioya 2004 and references therein).
Prevalent winds in high-z galaxies, particularly in LBGs, are to be expected
given their large surface densities of star formation: the typical size of the star-
forming cores in LBGs is rhalf ∼ 1.6 h−1 70 kpc (e.g., Giavalisco et al. 1996) and
−1
their SFRs are ∼ 1 – 100 M⊙ yr . Thus, they have star formation surface den-
sities > 1 M⊙ yr−1 kpc−2 . However, one should be cautious when applying local
wind criteria to high-z galaxies because there are significant structural differences
in starbursts between the two epochs. The energy injection zone in local star-
bursts is much smaller than the galaxy half-light radius and generally centered
on the nucleus, whereas the starbursts in LBGs appear to be galaxy wide. The
prominent disks of local starbursts were probably not yet assembled in z ∼ 3
LBGs, perhaps resulting in more spherical winds than in local starbursts.
A well-studied wind in the gravitationally lensed LBG MS 1512−cB58 (Pettini
et al. 1998, 2000, 2002) has bulk outflow velocity ∼ 255 km s−1 on the basis
of the positions of the low-ionization absorption lines relative to the rest-frame
optical emission lines. Pettini et al. (2002) note that its outflow kinematics are
remarkably symmetric: The profiles of the absorption lines from the different
ionization stages are broadly similar, spanning a range of velocities of ∼ 1000
km s−1 , whereas the receding portion of the outflow as mapped by the redshifted
backscattered Lyα emission also has essentially the same kinematics. The derived
mass outflow rate (∼ 70 M⊙ yr−1 ) exceeds the SFR of this galaxy (SFR ≈ 40 M⊙
yr−1 ), so this outflow may have had a strong impact on the chemical evolution of
the host galaxy. The entrained wind material appears to have enough energy to
escape the gravitational potential of MS 1512−cB58 (Mbaryons ∼ 1010 M⊙ ), but
the large α/Fe ratio in the ISM of this object suggests that at least some of the
material made by previous stellar generations is retained.
The properties of the outflow in MS 1512−cB58 seem to be typical of those
in LBGs, although the data on fainter objects are necessarily more uncertain
(Pettini et al. 2001; Adelberger et al. 2003; Shapley et al. 2003). Large velocity
shifts averaging ∼ 650 km s−1 are found by Shapley et al. (2003) between the
low-ionization lines and the Lyα emission lines of LBGs. A comparison with the
study of Pettini et al. (2001) suggests that these velocity offsets reduce to ∼ 300
km s−1 when measured relative to the more reliable nebular lines. This value is
slightly higher than the outflow velocities found in low-z galaxies of similar SFR’s
(§4.4).
The equivalent widths of blueshifted low-ionization interstellar absorption lines
in LBGs anti-correlate strongly with the strength of the Lyα emission, and cor-
relate with the color excess E(B − V ). The latter suggests that dust is entrained
with the outflowing neutral gas and is sufficiently widespread to redden the host
34 Veilleux, Cecil & Bland-Hawthorn
LBG; this effect is also observed in local wind galaxies (§4.10). The former is
easy to understand if we recall that the equivalent widths of saturated absorption
lines (as is the case here) depend only on the covering fraction of the absorbing
material and the range of velocities over which this material is absorbing. Larger
covering factor or absorbing velocity interval implies that less Lyα emission can
escape from the wind. This effect may also explain the redder UV continuum
and the larger kinematic offsets between Lyα and the interstellar absorption lines
observed in weak Lyα-emitting LBGs (Shapley et al. 2003).
Quantifying the environmental impact of LBG winds comes by probing the
environment with spectra of background QSOs. Around six z ∼ 3 LBGs, Adel-
berger et al. (2003) find hints of an H I deficit within comoving radius 0.5 h−1 70
Mpc. They favor a scenario whereby LBG winds influence the nearby IGM di-
rectly over a proximity effect caused by LBG-ionizing radiation. The excess of
absorption-line systems with large C IV columns that they find near LBGs is in-
terpreted as further evidence for chemical enrichment of the IGM by LBG winds,
although it could also be attributed to debris from tidal interactions (e.g., Morris
& van den Berg 1994).
In a recent extension to this survey, Adelberger et al. (2005) find that the
relationship between C IV column density and clustering around LBGs is still
present, although at a lower level than in the original survey. Most galaxies
now appear to have significant H I within 1 h−1 Mpc of their centers, but some
fraction of them (∼ 1/3) still show a significant deficit. The LBGs with strong H I
absorption have roughly as much absorption as expected from windless, smoothed
particle hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations of ΛCDM universes (e.g., Croft et al.
2002; Kollmeier et al. 2003), but LBGs without much H I are not present in
these simulations. These results are at odds with the original suggestion of large,
spherical windblown cavities around LBGs (Adelberger et al. 2003). They are
qualitatively more consistent with the idea that winds emerge along paths of least
resistance, possibly avoiding large-scale filaments (e.g., Theuns et al. 2002).
Clearly, more data of high quality are needed for a final verdict (see, e.g., Côté
et al. 2005).
There is growing evidence that GWs have inhibited early star formation and have
ejected a significant fraction of the baryons once found in galaxies. The latter may
explain why few baryons are in stars (Ω∗ /Ωb ∼ 0.1; Fukugita, Hogan, & Peebles
1998) and why galaxies like the Milky Way contain fewer than expected from
hydrodynamical simulations (Silk 2003). We review in this section the impact of
winds on galaxies and on their environment.
clining galaxy luminosity or mass (e.g. Persic, Salucci & Stel 1996; Mateo 1998).
In a seminal paper, Dekel & Silk (1986) anticipated this now well-established
trend after considering the impact of SN-driven outflows in protodwarfs (see also
Nulsen & Fabian 1997).
But there are reasons for believing that most of the feedback prescriptions
imposed in CDM hydro simulations to date have little or no relevance to real
galaxies (see Springel & Hernquist 2003 for a recent summary); many of the
prescriptions manifestly do not conserve energy or entropy in the flow. When
one considers the evolution of GWs in different environments, the trends (i.e.
those arising from the action of winds) with total galaxy mass may be far less
marked. For example, gas accretion onto a galaxy can staunch the developing
outflow for any galaxy mass (e.g. Fujita et al. 2004; Springel & Hernquist 2003).
Therefore, it is not obvious which of the structural properties can be ascribed to
the action of winds at the present time.
7.1.4 POROSITY OF HOST ISM The relative contribution of AGN and
starbursts to the inferred ionizing background depends critically on fesc, the
fraction of ionizing photons that escape from each object. The column densities of
disks imply τ ≈ 104 −107 at the Lyman edge, so leakage of ionizing radiation must
be set by the topology of the ISM. GWs should play a key role in clearing a path
for the escaping radiation (e.g., Dove, Shull, & Ferrara 2000), but this has not
yet been confirmed observationally from constraints on fesc. Hα measurements of
high-velocity clouds above the disk of our Galaxy indicate that the escape fraction
normal to the disk is 6% (fesc ≈ 1% – 2% averaged over 4π sr; Bland-Hawthorn
& Maloney 1999, 2002). Estimates of the escape fraction in local, UV-bright
starburst galaxies yield fesc ≤ 6% (Heckman et al. 2001b and references therein),
and similar values are inferred for bright blue galaxies at z = 1.1 − 1.4 (Malkan,
Webb, & Konopacky 2003). Star-forming galaxies thus contribute little (< 15%)
to the ionizing background at z < ∼ 1.5. The situation may be different at z > ∼ 3,
where the comoving number density of QSOs declines rapidly. Steidel, Pettini,
& Adelberger (2001) infer fesc ≈ 50 − 100% for hzi = 3.4 LBGs, but these results
have been questioned by Giallongo et al. (2002), Fernández-Soto, Lanzetta, &
Chen (2003), and Inoue et al. (2005). The dark cores of the saturated interstellar
absorption lines in LBGs (Shapley et al. 2003) also appear inconsistent with large
fesc , unless we see little of the escaping ionizing radiation. The large value of fesc
inferred by Steidel et al. (2001), if confirmed, may be due to powerful GWs in
these objects (§6.1).
7.1.5 SPHEROID – BLACK HOLE CONNECTION The masses of the
central BHs in early-type galaxies and bulges correlate well with the velocity
dispersions of the spheroidal component: MBH = 1.3 × 108 σ2004 M⊙ (Ferrarese
& Merrit 2000; Gebhardt et al. 2000; Tremaine et al. 2002). This correlation
is remarkably similar to the Faber–Jackson relation (Bernardi et al. 2003), and
suggests a causal connection between galaxy formation and BH growth by means
of a GW that regulates BH fueling (e.g., Silk & Rees 1998; Haehnelt et al. 1998;
Fabian 1999; King 2003; Murray, Quataert, & Thompson 2005; Begelman &
38 Veilleux, Cecil & Bland-Hawthorn
Nath 2005). The wind may be produced by the starburst that accompanied the
formation of the spheroid or by the BH itself. An Eddington-like luminosity is
derived for the starburst or the BH, above which the growth of both spheroid
and BH is stopped by the wind. In the case of a dominant BH wind, the Salpeter
timescale, i.e. the timescale for MBH to double, must be similar to the star
formation timescale so that sufficient stars are formed before the BH wind blows
away the ambient gas and stops star formation (Murray et al. 2005). The massive
winds detected in nearby ULIRGs (§4.5) may be local examples of what might
have occurred as spheroids formed (e.g., high-z LBGs and submm galaxies; §6.1).
the ICM. The hot, relativistic gas injected into the ICM by the AGN reduces, and
perhaps even quenches, the mass accretion of cooling flows. The exact mecha-
nism by which energy in the radio bubbles turns into heat is still debated, but the
absence of strong shocks along cavity walls, and the discovery of low-amplitude,
semi-periodic ripples in the Perseus cluster (Fabian et al. 2003) suggest that
viscous dissipation of sound waves may heat much of the inner ICM (see also
Ruszkowski, Brüggen, & Begelman 2004a, 2004b; Reynolds et al. 2005). Other
possible heaters include thermal conduction and turbulent mixing (e.g., Narayan
& Medvedev 2001; Ruzkowski & Begelman 2002; Kim & Narayan 2003a, 2003b).
7.2.2 INTERGALACTIC MEDIUM The sphere of influence of GWs ap-
pears to extend to the low-density environment of the Lyα forest [N(H I) < 17
∼ 10
cm−2 ]. Here, metallicities of 0.1% – 1% solar have been measured, with a possi-
ble excess of α-rich SN II products in the denser clouds (e.g., Rauch, Haehnelt,
& Steinmetz 1997; Songaila 1997; Hellsten et al. 1997; Davé et al. 1998; Car-
swell, Shaye, & Kim 2002). The detection of metals in the IGM seems to favor
momentum- over energy-driven winds (§2.3), or scenarios where the winds emerge
along paths of least resistance without disturbing the filaments responsible for the
Lyα forest (e.g., Theuns et al. 2002). Remarkably, both the column density dis-
tribution of C IV absorbers and its integral (ΩC IV ) are invariant over 2 <
∼z< ∼5
(Songaila 2001; Pettini et al. 2003). One possible explanation is that most of
the IGM metals are already in place by z ∼ 5, perhaps from SN-driven out-
flows from low-mass subgalactic systems (e.g., Qian & Wasserburg 2005). Such
systems may also be responsible for reionizing the IGM (Loeb & Barkana 2001
and references therein). However, this scenario does not completely explain why
ΩC IV remains constant over this redshift range despite variations in the intensity
and spectrum of the ionizing background (§7.1.4). Alternatively, the C IV sys-
tems are associated directly with GWs from LBGs at z < ∼ 5, and the constancy
of ΩC IV arises instead from the flatness of the SFR density over z ≃ 1.5 − 4
(Adelberger et al. 2003). A critical discriminator between these two scenarios is
to measure the metallicity in truly intergalactic clouds with N(H I) < 14 −2
∼ 10 cm
(Cen, Nagamine, & Ostriker 2005). This is a portion of the Lyα forest that has
not yet been explored in detail (although see Ellison et al. 2000).
8 FUTURE DIRECTIONS
Although great strides have been made over the past 25 years in understanding
the physics and impact of GWs in the local and distant universe, much work
remains to be done to quantify the role of these winds on the formation and
evolution of galaxy-sized structures and the intergalactic environment. We now
outline observational and theoretical issues that we feel deserve urgent attention.
erful but not so energetic as to expel all gas from their hosts. For example, the
Galaxy’s wind (§3.2) would be undetectable beyond the Local Group. While it
will be difficult to detect blown-away relics, there is a clear need to search the
local volume systematically for winds. At optical wavelengths, the advent of
tunable filters on 8-meter class telescopes will improve tenfold the sensitivity of
optical wind surveys. These instruments will be ideal for searching for galaxies
with starburst-driven winds through the contrast in gaseous excitation between
wind and star-forming disk (§4.8). An IF spectrometer equipped with adaptive
optics would complement tunable filters by providing densely sampled data on
kinematics, filling factor, and excitation processes. CXO and XMM-Newton will
continue to harvest high-quality data on the hot medium in GWs. New long-
wavelength radio telescopes (e.g., GMRT, GBT, EVLA, and SKA) can better
search for the relativistic component of GWs. Particularly important will be to
determine the relative importance of GWs in dwarf and massive galaxies (§4.5).
8.1.2 WIND FLUID This component drives starburst-driven winds, yet
has been detected in very few objects. Metal abundances suggest enrichment by
SNe II, but the measurements are highly uncertain. Both sensitivity and high
spatial resolution are needed to isolate the hot wind fluid from X-ray stellar bi-
naries and the rest of the X-ray-emitting gas. But, no such instrument is planned
for the foreseeable future. Indirect methods that rely on the properties of gas
in the energy injection zone to constrain the wind pressure may be necessary.
Current measurements of the pressure profiles in wind galaxies are certainly con-
taminated by the foreground/background disk ISM. Measurements in the mid-
or far-IR with the Spitzer Space Telescope (SST) and Herschel Space Observatory
will reduce the effects of dust obscuration.
8.1.3 ENTRAINED MOLECULAR GAS & DUST Despite the impor-
tant role of the molecular component in GWs, high-quality mm-wave data exist
only for M82. This is due to the limited sensitivity and spatial resolution of cur-
rent instruments, but this will change soon. New mm-wave arrays (e.g., CARMA,
and especially ALMA) will map the molecular gas in a large sample of nearby
galaxies with excellent resolution (< 1′′ ). Sub-mm and mid-IR data from the
ground (e.g., SMA, JCMT, CSO) and from space (e.g., SST and Herschel) will
constrain the amount and location of dust in the winds.
8.1.4 ZONE OF INFLUENCE & ESCAPE EFFICIENCY The envi-
ronmental impact of GWs depends on the size of their zone of influence and on
the fraction of wind fluid and entrained ISM that can vent from their hosts. Very
deep emission-line, X-ray, and radio data on large scale would help tremendously
to constrain wind extent. Tunable filters on 8-meter class telescopes may be par-
ticularly useful here. Absorption-line studies of bright background galaxies (e.g.,
high-z quasars, LBGs) have proven to be a very powerful tool to constrain the
zone of influence of GWs at large redshifts. The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph
(COS) on HST could extend the sample to a larger set of wind galaxies. Deep
21-cm maps of GW hosts on scales of up to ∼ 100 kpc would help to quantify
the effects of halo drag. The escape efficiency of winds may also be constrained
Galactic Winds 41
AST-9874973.
44 Veilleux, Cecil & Bland-Hawthorn
Figure 2: Aspects of the Milky Way’s wind. (top) ROSAT 1.5 keV diffuse X-ray map
that shows a biconical pattern emerging from the Galactic Center on scales of tens of
degrees. (bottom) The inner ∼ 2.5×2.5◦ around the Galactic Center. Above the plane in
red is the Galactic Center Lobe (GCL), here imaged by Law & Yusef-Zadeh with rasters
from the Green Bank Telescope (GBT). Elsewhere, the color image comes from 8.3 (B),
∼ 13 (G), and 21.3 (R) µm scans obtained with the SPIRIT III radiometer on the MSX
spacecraft. These show embedded dust at various temperatures. Note the warm dust
filaments along the edges of the GCL.
Figure 3: NGC 3079 imaged with HST (red for Hα+[N II], green for I-band) and CXO
(blue). (a) large-scale emission across 15 × 5 kpc. Numerous Hα filaments rise above the
disk. Note the V-shaped wind pattern extending in X rays from nucleus; for clarity, we
have suppressed the diffuse X-ray emission across the superbubble, where it is generally
clumped (see [c]). (b) The 1 × 1.2 kpc superbubble in Hα+[N II] emission, with log-
scaled intensities. It is composed of 4 vertical towers of twisted filaments; the towers have
strikingly similar morphologies. (c) Close-up of the wind-swept, circumnuclear region.
Note how X-ray emission (blue) clumps along the optical filaments of the superbubble at
the limit of CXO’s resolution. A prominent dust filament at left drops out of the wind.
Figure 4: M82, imaged by the WIYN telescope in Hα (magenta) and HST in BVI
continuum colors (courtesy Smith, Gallagher, & Westmoquette). Several of the largest
scale filaments trace all the way back to super-starclusters embedded in the disk.
Figure 5: (a) Starburst galaxy NGC 1482 imaged in Hα (red), [N II] (green), and CXO
(blue). The bar is 3 kpc long. For this and the other three panels, N is up and E is left,
and intensities in all bands are log-scaled. (b) Excitation map of NGC 1482 showing the
shock-excited ([N II] λ6583/Hα > ∼ 1 in black), biconical structure due to the wind above
and below the star-forming disk ([N II]/Hα < 1 in orange). The scale is the same as in
(a), and the white crosses indicate the locations of two bright star-forming regions in the
disk. (c) Seyfert galaxy NGC 4388 imaged in Hα (red), [N II] (green), and CXO (blue).
The bar is 8 kpc long. The kinematics of the extraplanar gas < ∼ 8 kpc north of the nucleus
are dominated by the AGN-driven outflow. The long Hα trail extending further to the
north-east may be due to ram-pressure stripping by the ICM in the Virgo cluster. (d)
Central region of the Circinus galaxy imaged in [O III] (blue) and blueshifted (between
–150 and 0 km s−1 ) Hα (red). The bar is 1 kpc long. The [O III] emission traces the
ionization cone and conical wind produced by the AGN, whereas the Hα emission east
of the nucleus is dominated by the circumnuclear starburst. Spectacular filaments and
bow shocks are seen on scales of ∼ 500 – 900 pc.
Galactic Winds 45
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