On the origin of the anomalous gas, non-declining rotation curve, and disc asymmetries in NGC 253

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Abstract

We present a multiwavelength (from far-ultraviolet to emission) study of star formation feedback on the kinematics of the interstellar medium in the Sculptor galaxy, NGC 253. Its three well-known features (a disrupted stellar disc, a previously reported declining rotation curve, and anomalous gas) are studied in a common context of disc asymmetries. About 170 h of on-source ATCA observations are collected and reduced into two versions of data cubes of different angular resolution (30 arcsec/2 arcmin) and H i column density sensitivity (7.4 × 1019 cm-2/4 × 1018 cm-2). We separate the anomalous gas from the disc using a custom-made line profile fitting toolkit called FMG. Two star formation tracers (H α, FUV emission) are carefully processed and studied. We find that at R > 7.5 kpc, the star formation activity is strongly lopsided (SFRNE > SFRSW), and investigate several other properties (H α/FUV, dust temperature, stellar age, and disc stability parameters). We also find that the declining nature of the rotation curve perceived by previous studies is not intrinsic but a combined effect of kinematical asymmetries at R = 7.5-16 kpc. This is likely the consequence of star formation triggered outflow. The mass distribution and the time-scale of the anomalous gas also imply that it originates from gas outflow, which is perhaps caused by galaxy-galaxy interaction considering the crowded environment of NGC 253.

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Lyu, X., Westmeier, T., Meurer, G. R., & Hanish, D. J. (2023). On the origin of the anomalous gas, non-declining rotation curve, and disc asymmetries in NGC 253. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 524(1), 1169–1190. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stad1772

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