- González-Alfonso, E;
- Armus, L;
- Carrera, FJ;
- Charmandaris, V;
- Efstathiou, A;
- Egami, E;
- Fernández-Ontiveros, JA;
- Fischer, J;
- Granato, GL;
- Gruppioni, C;
- Hatziminaoglou, E;
- Imanishi, M;
- Isobe, N;
- Kaneda, H;
- Koziel-Wierzbowska, D;
- Malkan, MA;
- Martín-Pintado, J;
- Mateos, S;
- Matsuhara, H;
- Miniutti, G;
- Nakagawa, T;
- Pozzi, F;
- Rico-Villas, F;
- Rodighiero, G;
- Roelfsema, P;
- Spinoglio, L;
- Spoon, HWW;
- Sturm, E;
- van der Tak, F;
- Vignali, C;
- Wang, L
AbstractA far-infrared observatory such as the SPace Infrared telescope for Cosmology and Astrophysics, with its unprecedented spectroscopic sensitivity, would unveil the role of feedback in galaxy evolution during the last ~10 Gyr of the Universe (z = 1.5–2), through the use of far- and mid-infrared molecular and ionic fine structure lines that trace outflowing and infalling gas. Outflowing gas is identified in the far-infrared through P-Cygni line shapes and absorption blueshifted wings in molecular lines with high dipolar moments, and through emission line wings of fine-structure lines of ionised gas. We quantify the detectability of galaxy-scale massive molecular and ionised outflows as a function of redshift in AGN-dominated, starburst-dominated, and main-sequence galaxies, explore the detectability of metal-rich inflows in the local Universe, and describe the most significant synergies with other current and future observatories that will measure feedback in galaxies via complementary tracers at other wavelengths.