Aims. We investigate the fueling and the feedback of star formation and nuclear activity in NGC 1068, a nearby (D = 14 Mpc) Seyfert 2 barred galaxy, by analyzing the distribution and kinematics of the molecular gas in the disk. We aim to understand if and how gas accretion can self-regulate. Methods. We have used the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) to map the emission of a set of dense molecular gas (n(H 2 ) 10 5−6 cm −3 ) tracers (CO(3-2), CO(6-5), HCN(4-3), HCO + (4-3), and CS(7-6)) and their underlying continuum emission in the central r ∼ 2 kpc of NGC 1068 with spatial resolutions ∼0.3 −0.5 (∼20-35 pc for the assumed distance of D = 14 Mpc). Results. The sensitivity and spatial resolution of ALMA give an unprecedented detailed view of the distribution and kinematics of the dense molecular gas (n(H 2 ) ≥ 10 5−6 cm −3 ) in NGC 1068. Molecular line and dust continuum emissions are detected from a r ∼ 200 pc off-centered circumnuclear disk (CND), from the 2.6 kpc-diameter bar region, and from the r ∼ 1.3 kpc starburst (SB) ring. Most of the emission in HCO + , HCN, and CS stems from the CND. Molecular line ratios show dramatic order-of-magnitude changes inside the CND that are correlated with the UV/X-ray illumination by the active galactic nucleus (AGN), betraying ongoing feedback. We used the dust continuum fluxes measured by ALMA together with NIR/MIR data to constrain the properties of the putative torus using CLUMPY models and found a torus radius of 20 +6 −10 pc. The Fourier decomposition of the gas velocity field indicates that rotation is perturbed by an inward radial flow in the SB ring and the bar region. However, the gas kinematics from r ∼ 50 pc out to r ∼ 400 pc reveal a massive (M mol ∼ 2.7 +0.9 −1.2 × 10 7 M ) outflow in all molecular tracers. The tight correlation between the ionized gas outflow, the radio jet, and the occurrence of outward motions in the disk suggests that the outflow is AGN driven. Conclusions. The molecular outflow is likely launched when the ionization cone of the narrow line region sweeps the nuclear disk. The outflow rate estimated in the CND, dM/dt ∼ 63 +21 −37 M yr −1 , is an order of magnitude higher than the star formation rate at these radii, confirming that the outflow is AGN driven. The power of the AGN is able to account for the estimated momentum and kinetic luminosity of the outflow. The CND mass load rate of the CND outflow implies a very short gas depletion timescale of ≤1 Myr. The CND gas reservoir is likely replenished on longer timescales by efficient gas inflow from the outer disk.
We report the detection of the CO 4-3, 6-5, 9-8, 10-9, and 11-10 lines in the Broad Absorption Line quasar APM 08279+5255 at z = 3.9 using the IRAM 30 m telescope. We also present IRAM PdBI high spatial resolution observations of the CO 4-3 and 9-8 lines, and of the 1.4 mm dust radiation as well as an improved spectrum of the HCN(5-4) line. Unlike CO in other QSO host galaxies, the CO line SED of APM 08279+5255 rises up to the CO(10-9) transition. The line fluxes in the CO ladder and the dust continuum fluxes are best fit by a two component model, a "cold" component at ∼65 K with a high density of n(H 2 ) = 1 × 10 5 cm −3 , and a "warm", ∼220 K component with a density of 1 × 10 4 cm −3 . We show that IR pumping via the 14 µm bending mode of HCN is the most likely channel for the HCN excitation. From our models we find, that the CO(1-0) emission is dominated by the dense gas component which implies that the CO conversion factor is higher than usually assumed for high-z galaxies with α ≈ 5 M (K km s −1 pc 2 ) −1 . Using brightness temperature arguments, the results from our high-resolution mapping, and lens models from the literature, we argue that the molecular lines and the dust continuum emission arise from a very compact (r ≈ 100−300 pc), highly gravitationally magnified (m = 60−110) region surrounding the central AGN. Part of the difference relative to other high-z QSOs may therefore be due to the configuration of the gravitational lens, which gives us a high-magnification zoom right into the central 200-pc radius of APM 08279+5255 where IR pumping plays a significant role for the excitation of the molecular lines.
The accurate measurement of extragalactic distances is a central challenge of modern astronomy, being required for any realistic description of the age, geometry and fate of the Universe. The measurement of relative extragalactic distances has become fairly routine, but estimates of absolute distances are rare 1 . In the vicinity of the Sun, direct geometric techniques for obtaining absolute distances, such as orbital parallax, are feasible, but such techniques have hitherto been dif®cult to apply to other galaxies. As a result, uncertainties in the expansion rate and age of the Universe are dominated by uncertainties in the absolute calibration of the extragalactic distance ladder 2 . Here we report a geometric distance to the galaxy NGC4258, which we infer from the direct measurement of orbital motions in a disk of gas surrounding the nucleus of this galaxy. The distance so deter-minedÐ7:2 6 0:3 MpcÐis the most precise absolute extragalactic distance yet measured, and is likely to play an important role in future distance-scale calibrations.NGC4258 is one of 22 nearby active galactic nuclei (AGN) known to possess nuclear water masers (the microwave equivalent of lasers). The enormous surface brightnesses ( ) 10 12 K), relatively small sizes ( ( 10 14 cm) and narrow linewidths (a few km s -1 ) of these masers make them ideal probes of the structure and dynamics of the molecular gas in which they residue. Very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations of the NGC4258 maser have provided the ®rst direct images of an AGN accretion disk, revealing a thin, subparsec-scale, differentially rotating warped disk in the nucleus of this relatively weak Seyfert 2 AGN 3±6 . Two distinct populations of masers exist in NGC4258. The ®rst are the highvelocity masers. These masers amplify their own spontaneous emission and are offset 61,000 km s -1 and 4.7±8.0 mas (0.16± 0.28 pc for a distance of 7.2 Mpc) on either side of the disk centre. The keplerian rotation curve traced by these masers requires a central binding mass (M), presumably in the form of a supermassive black hole, of 3:9 6 0:1 3 10 7 D=7:2 Mpcsin i s =sin 82 2 2 Figure 1 The NGC4258 water maser. The upper panel shows the best-®tting warped-disk model superposed on actual maser positions as measured by the VLBA of the NRAO, with top as North. The ®lled square marks the centre of the disk, as determined from a global disk-®tting analysis 8 . The ®lled triangles show the positions of the high-velocity masers, so called because they occur at frequencies corresponding to Doppler shifts of ,61,000 km s -1 with respect to the galaxy systemic velocity of ,470 km s -1 . This is apparent in the VLBA total power spectrum (lower panel). The inset shows line-of-sight (LOS) velocity versus impact parameter for the best-®tting keplerian disk, with the maser data superposed. The high-velocity masers trace a keplerian curve to better than 1%. Monitoring of these features indicates that they drift by less than ,1 km s -1 yr -1 (refs 14±16) and requires that they lie within 5±1...
We present the first unbiased molecular line survey towards an extragalactic source, namely the nuclear region of the starburst galaxy NGC 253. The scan covers the frequency band from 129.1 to 175.2 GHz, i.e. most of the 2 mm atmospheric window. We identify 111 spectral features as transitions from 25 different molecular species. Eight of which (three tentatively) are detected for the first time in the extragalactic interstellar medium. Among these newly detected species, we detected the rare isotopomers 34 SO and HC 18 O + . Tentative detections of two deuterated species, DNC and N 2 D + , are reported for the first time from a target beyond the Magellanic Clouds. Additionally, three hydrogen recombination lines are identified, while no organic molecules larger than methanol are detected. Column densities and rotation temperatures are calculated for all Observations and resultsThe first molecular frequency scan of an external galaxy was carried out at 2 mm with the 30 m IRAM telescope at Pico Veleta, Spain, between 2001 and 2004. It covers ∼86% of the observable 2 mm atmospheric window, from 129.1 to 175.2 GHz (Fig. 1). At these frequencies, the telescope beamwidth ranges from 19 ′′ to 14 ′′ . Fig. 2 shows the size of the 30 m beam on top of an interferometric map of SiO emission . A K-band image of NGC 253 (Engelbracht et al. 1998) is displayed in grey-scale to illustrate the size of the observed region relative to the galaxy.
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