- Details
- Published on 11 November 2020
Vol. 643
4. Extragalactic astronomy
Dust and gas in the central region of NGC 1316 (Fornax A). Its origin and nature

The central galaxy of the Fornax cluster, NGC 1316, is an early-type galaxy that hosts the radio source FornaxA. NGC 1316 reveals a perturbed dust structure within a 5kpc radius as well as gas that is probably accreted from a merger. Using archival HST/ACS color data and MUSE maps of the ionized gas, the authors studied the central stellar population as well as neutral (NaI D-lines) and ionized ([NII]) velocity fields. The excitation of the ionized gas is thought to come from the post-AGB stars of the old- and intermediate-age stellar population. In the dust-free regions, the interstellar NaI D lines appear in emission, which is indicative of a galactic wind. In the very center, a bipolar velocity field of the ionized gas is observed, which is interpreted as an outflow. There is also an almost edge-on gas and/or dust disk along the major axis of NGC 1316. The dust in NGC 1316 appears to have different origins. There exists an outflow that is curved along the line-of-sight. Nuclear outflows may be important dust-producing machines in galaxies. The dusty gaseous disk looks to be a predecessor for a central dust lane.