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Creators/Authors contains: "Shetty, Shravan"

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  1. ABSTRACT We have re-observed $$\rm \sim$$40 low-inclination, star-forming galaxies from the MaNGA survey (σ ∼ 65 km s−1) at ∼6.5 times higher spectral resolution (σ ∼ 10 km s−1) using the HexPak integral field unit on the WIYN 3.5-m telescope. The aim of these observations is to calibrate MaNGA’s instrumental resolution and to characterize turbulence in the warm interstellar medium and ionized galactic outflows. Here we report the results for the Hα region observations as they pertain to the calibration of MaNGA’s spectral resolution. Remarkably, we find that the previously reported MaNGA line-spread-function (LSF) Gaussian width is systematically underestimated by only 1 per cent. The LSF increase modestly reduces the characteristic dispersion of H ii regions-dominated spectra sampled at 1–2 kpc spatial scales from 23 to 20 km s−1 in our sample, or a 25 per cent decrease in the random-motion kinetic energy. This commensurately lowers the dispersion zeropoint in the relation between line-width and star-formation rate surface-density in galaxies sampled on the same spatial scale. This modest zero-point shift does not appear to alter the power-law slope in the relation between line-width and star-formation rate surface-density. We also show that adopting a scheme whereby corrected line-widths are computed as the square root of the median of the difference in the squared measured line width and the squared LSF Gaussian avoids biases and allows for lower signal-to-noise data to be used reliably. 
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  2. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey IV Mapping Nearby Galaxies at APO (MaNGA) program has been operating from 2014 to 2020, and has now observed a sample of 9269 galaxies in the low redshift universe (z ∼ 0.05) with integral-field spectroscopy. With rest-optical (λλ0.36-1.0 μm) spectral resolution R ∼ 2000 the instrumental spectral line-spread function (LSF) typically has 1σ width of about 70 km s-1, which poses a challenge for the study of the typically 20-30 km s-1 velocity dispersion of the ionized gas in present-day disk galaxies. In this contribution, we present a major revision of the MaNGA data pipeline architecture, focusing particularly on a variety of factors impacting the effective LSF (e.g., under-sampling, spectral rectification, and data cube construction). Through comparison with external assessments of the MaNGA data provided by substantially higher-resolution R ∼ 10,000 instruments, we demonstrate that the revised MPL-10 pipeline measures the instrumental LSF sufficiently accurately (≤0.6% systematic, 2% random around the wavelength of Hα) that it enables reliable measurements of astrophysical velocity dispersions σHα ∼ 20 km s-1 for spaxels with emission lines detected at signal-to-noise ratio > 50. Velocity dispersions derived from [O II], Hβ, [O III], [N II], and [S II] are consistent with those derived from Hα to within about 2% at σHα > 30 km s-1. Although the impact of these changes to the estimated LSF will be minimal at velocity dispersions greater than about 100 km s-1, scientific results from previous data releases that are based on dispersions far below the instrumental resolution should be reevaluated. 
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