GeminiFocus December 2012 | Page 12

Figure 3. Line-of-sight velocities (left panels) and velocity dispersions (right panels) of the gas comprising the nebulae (in units of km/s). that in these two different types of objects we see two fundamentally different mechanisms of producing ionized gas on galaxywide scales. However, the mere fact that the gas is distributed over the entire galaxy does not imply that the gas is outflowing. The second piece of the puzzle is the kinematic measurements (Figure 3). The Doppler effect allows us to determine the average line-of-sight velocity of the gas at every spatial element in the field-of-view. If the outflow is completely isotropic, then the average radial velocity at any point is in fact zero; thus, our measurements critically rely on the intrinsic anisotropy of quasar winds. Fortunately, such anisotropies seem to be common. Indeed, in Figure 3 we see in both SDSS J0319-0058 and SDSS J1040+4745 that one side predominantly shows blue-shifted emission, while the other side is mostly redshifted. This means that the gas on one side is moving towards us (and away from the galaxy, which is in the center of each image); the gas on the other side is moving away from us (and the galaxy). 12 GeminiFocus Our interpretation of the GMOS observations is that we have finally observed the long-sought evidence of radiation-pressuredriven quasar winds. We are conducting further analysis of our dataset to construct kinematic models of quasar outflows and determine their energetics. This will allow us to estimate the effects of such winds on galaxy evolution. Furthermore, this semester we are obtaining new Gemini observations of a comparison sample of unobscured quasars to determine the effects of quasar orientation, and perhaps evolutionary stage on the observed properties of the outflows. We are grateful for the opportunity to use world-class Gemini data to reveal the critical details of the process of quasar feedback. References: The first of the papers describing these results will be published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Kauffmann, G., et al., Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 346: 1055, 2003 Stoughton, C., et al., The Astronomical Journal, 123: 485, 2002 York, D. G., et al., The Astronomical Journal, 120: 1579, 2002 Guilin Liu is a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. He can be reached at: [email protected] Nadia Zakamska is an assistant professor at the same department. Her e-mail address is: [email protected] December2012