First science with SAMI: A serendipitously discovered galactic wind in ESO 185-G031

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Abstract
We present the first scientific results from the Sydney-AAO Multi-Object IFS (SAMI) at the Anglo-Australian Telescope. This unique instrument deploys 13 fused fiber bundles (hexabundles) across a one-degree field of view allowing simultaneous spatially resolved spectroscopy of 13 galaxies. During the first SAMI commissioning run, targeting a single galaxy field, one object (ESO 185-G031) was found to have extended minor axis emission with ionization and kinematic properties consistent with a large-scale galactic wind. The importance of this result is twofold: (1) fiber bundle spectrographs are able to identify low surface brightness emission arising from extranuclear activity and (2) such activity may be more common than presently assumed because conventional multi-object spectrographs use single-aperture fibers and spectra from these are nearly always dominated by nuclear emission. These early results demonstrate the extraordinary potential of multi-object hexabundle spectroscopy in future galaxy surveys. © 2012. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved..
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Fogarty, LMR
;
Bland-Hawthorn, J
;
Croom, SM
;
Green, AW
;
Bryant, JJ
;
;
Richards, S
;
Allen, JT
;
Bauer, AE
; ...
Kreimeyer, K
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Publication Year
2012-12-10
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Journal Article
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UNSW Faculty
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download 1211.0352v1.pdf 2.07 MB Adobe Portable Document Format Published version
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