402 research outputs found
Multi-phase Nature of a Radiation-Driven Fountain with Nuclear Starburst in a Low-mass Active Galactic Nucleus
The structures and dynamics of molecular, atomic, and ionized gases are
studied around a low-luminosity active galactic nucleus (AGN) with a small
() black hole using 3D radiation hydrodynamic
simulations. We studied, for the first time, the non-equilibrium chemistry for
the X-ray dominated region in the "radiation-driven fountain" (Wada 2012) with
supernova feedback. A double hollow cone structure is naturally formed without
postulating a thick "torus" around a central source. The cone is occupied with
an inhomogeneous, diffuse ionized gas and surrounded by a geometrically thick
() atomic gas. Dense molecular gases are distributed near the
equatorial plane, and energy feedback from supernovae enhances their scale
height. Molecular hydrogen exists in a hot phase ( > 1000 K) as well as in a
cold ( cm) phase. The velocity dispersion of
H in the vertical direction is comparable to the rotational velocity, which
is consistent with near infrared observations of nearby Seyfert galaxies. Using
3D radiation transfer calculations for the dust emission, we find polar
emission in the mid-infrared band (12), which is associated with bipolar
outflows, as suggested in recent interferometric observations of nearby AGNs.
If the viewing angle for the nucleus is larger than 75 deg, the spectral energy
distribution (~ 2 -- 60 ) of this model is consistent with that of the
Circinus galaxy. The multi-phase interstellar medium observed in
optical/infrared and X-ray observations is also discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for ApJL. A movie file for Fig.5b can be
downloaded from http://astrophysics.jp/Circinus
The Effect of Self-gravity of Gas on Gas Fueling in Barred Galaxies with a Supermassive Black Hole
In our previous paper, we have shown that a gas disk in the nuclear region of
a barred galaxy which contains a central supermassive black hole (SMBH) rapidly
evolves into a nuclear gas ring by the effect of an additional inner Lindblad
resonance caused by the SMBH. In this paper, we investigate the fate of the gas
ring, involving self-gravity of gas, using two-dimensional hydrodynamical
simulations. We find that the gas ring becomes gravitationally unstable for a
gas surface density of gas above a critical value, and fragments into several
gas clumps. Some denser clumps increase their mass via the accretion of the
surrounding gas and collisions with other clumps, and finally a very massive
gas clump (10^7 M_sun) is formed. Due to the torque from the most massive
clump, a part of the gas in the ring loses its angular momentum and falls into
the galactic center. As a result, a nuclear gas disk (50 pc) is formed around
the SMBH. The accretion rate for pc attains about 1 M_sun/yr for
3.5*10^7 yr. At the final phase of the bar-driven fueling, self-gravity is
crucial for the angular momentum transfer of the gas. This is a new mechanism
for gas fueling to the vicinity of the SMBH.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, AASTeX, submitted to Ap
On the Interpretation of the l-v Features in the Milky Way Galaxy
We model the gas dynamics of barred galaxies using a three-dimensional,
high-resolution, -body+hydrodynamical simulation and apply it to the Milky
Way in an attempt to reproduce both the large-scale structure and the clumpy
morphology observed in Galactic H\emissiontype{I} and CO diagrams. Owing
to including the multi-phase interstellar medium, self-gravity, star-formation
and supernovae feedback, the clumpy morphology, as well as the large-scale
features, in observed diagrams are naturally reproduced. We identify in
our diagrams with a number of not only large-scale peculiar features such
as the '3-kpc arm', '135-km s arm' and 'Connecting arm' but also clumpy
features such as `Bania clumps', and then link these features in a face-on view
of our model. We give suggestions on the real structure of the Milky Way and on
the fate of gas clumps in the central region.Comment: accepted to PAS
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