oai:arXiv.org:2407.02115
sciences : astrophysique
2024
06/11/2024
Giant (>100 kpc) nebulae associated with active galaxies provide rich information about the circumgalactic medium (CGM) around galaxies, its link with the interstellar medium (ISM) of the hosts and the mechanisms involved in their evolution.
We have studied the giant nebula associated with the Teacup (z=0.085) quasar based on VLT MUSE integral field spectroscopy to investigate whether the well known giant (~10 kpc) active galactic nucleus (AGN) induced outflow has an impact on the distribution of heavy elements in and outside the host galaxy.
For this, we have mapped the O/H and N/O abundances in two spatial dimensions across the giant nebula and within the galaxy by means of comparing emission line ratios with photoionisation model predictions.
We have found that the widely studied AGN driven outflow responsible for the 10 kpc ionised bubble is enhancing the gas metal abundance up to 10 kpc from the AGN.
O/H is solar or slightly higher in the bubble edges, in comparison with the subsolar abundances across the rest of the nebula (median O/H~0.63 O/H_sun)).
The main conclusion is that AGN feedback can produce metal enrichment at large extranuclear distances in galaxies (>~10 kpc).
;Comment: Accepted for publicacion in A&A.
8 pages, 4 figures
Villar-Martin, Montse,Cobá, Carlos López,Cazzoli, Sara,Montero, Enrique Pérez,Lavers, Antonio Cabrera, 2024, AGN feedback can produce metal enrichment on galaxy scales