ArXiv TLDR

Halfway to the Peak: Kinematic Signatures of Stable Rotating Disks in Luminous Infrared Galaxies at z=0.5-0.6

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2604.24711

Miriam Eleazer, Alexandra Pope, Anna Sajina, Lin Yan, Jason Young + 11 more

astro-ph.GA

TLDR

JWST MIRI/MRS reveals that luminous infrared galaxies at z=0.5-0.6 are stable rotating disks, with AGN activity causing only localized turbulence.

Key contributions

  • Used JWST MIRI/MRS to map kinematics of IR-luminous galaxies at z=0.5-0.6, beyond the local Universe.
  • Found all six galaxies exhibit ordered rotation (V/σ ≥ 2), consistent with stable disks, not major mergers.
  • No correlation between global kinematics (V/σ) and AGN fraction, implying AGN doesn't disrupt disks.
  • Higher AGN fractions linked to elevated central dispersions, suggesting localized turbulence from AGN feedback.

Why it matters

This JWST study provides the first mid-IR kinematic maps of distant, luminous infrared galaxies. It reveals these are mature, stable rotating disks, even with AGN activity, challenging assumptions about AGN feedback and mergers. This offers new insights into disk assembly and AGN triggering.

Original Abstract

We present a kinematic study of six infrared-luminous galaxies observed with the Mid-InfraRed Instrument Medium-Resolution Spectrometer (MIRI/MRS) onboard JWST. These galaxies lie at $z = 0.5$--$0.6$, midway between the present day and the peak of cosmic star formation. Our sample spans a range of star formation (SF) and active galactic nucleus (AGN) contributions to the mid-infrared emission. We characterize the dynamical state of these IR-luminous galaxies and assess how AGN activity influences the kinematics of the interstellar medium. Using mid-IR atomic lines, we map galaxy kinematics beyond the local Universe for the first time. The spatial resolution of MIRI/MRS (3.0 kpc for 0.46$\arcsec$ at z $\sim$ 0.55) allows us to resolve the internal kinematics of our targets. We compute kinematic maps in three different emission lines ([Ar II]6.99$μ$m, [Ne II]12.81$μ$m, and H$_2$ 0-0 S(5)6.91$μ$m). Using the [Ar II]6.99$μ$m kinematic maps, we derive rotation curves for these sources. All galaxies exhibit ordered rotation, with \(V/σ\geq 2\), consistent with stable disks. Although some show minor disturbances, we find no strong evidence for recent major mergers or galaxy-wide ionized outflows. We find no correlation between \(V/σ\) and AGN fraction, suggesting AGN activity does not significantly disrupt global kinematics or that disk disruption is not required to trigger AGN. However, galaxies with higher AGN fractions show elevated central dispersions, indicating localized turbulence, possibly due to AGN feedback, stellar feedback, accretion or bulge structure. These IR-luminous galaxies likely represent mature, rotationally supported disks, with AGN activation occurring after disk assembly.

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