Litcius/Paper detail

Multiphase Gas Flows in the Nearby Seyfert Galaxy ESO428–G014. Paper I

C. Feruglio, G. Fabbiano, M. Bischetti, M. Elvis, A. Travascio, F. Fiore

2020The Astrophysical Journal56 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract We present ALMA 230 GHz continuum and CO(2–1) observations of the nearby Compton-thick Seyfert galaxy ESO428–G14, with angular resolution 0.″7 (78 pc). CO(2–1) is distributed in clumpy spiral arms, a lopsided circumnuclear ring (CNR) with ∼200 pc radius, and a transverse gas lane with size <100 pc, which crosses the nucleus and connects the two portions of the CNR. The main CO velocity gradient is consistent with a rotating disk with dynamical mass M dyn = 5 × 10 9 M ⊙ within ∼1 kpc. We detect off-plane gas motions with respect to the main disk plane which likely trace a molecular outflow with rate , along a biconical structure with radius 700 pc. The CO outflow smoothly joins the warm molecular outflow detected in SINFONI/Very Large Telescope data in the central 170 pc, suggesting that the outflow may cool with increasing distance. Our dynamical modeling of the inner 100 pc region suggests a warped disk or bar, and of fast gas streams which may trace an inflow toward the AGN. The inner warped disk overlaps with the most obscured, CT region seen in X-rays. There, we derive a column density , suggesting that molecular gas may contribute significantly to the AGN obscuration. Most of the hard X-ray emitting nuclear region is deprived of cold molecular gas and shows a CO-cavity. The CO-cavity is filled with warm molecular gas traced by H 2 , confirming that the 3–6 keV continuum and Fe K α emission are due to scattering from dense ISM clouds.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsAstrophysicsOutflowRADIUSGalaxyLine (geometry)Conical surfaceSpiral galaxyGeometryMeteorologyMathematicsComputer securityComputer scienceGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, PhenomenaAstrophysics and Star Formation StudiesAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations