10 research outputs found
CO mapping of the nuclear region of NGC 6946 and IC 342 with Nobeyama millimeter array
CO observations of nearby galaxies with nuclear active star forming regions (and starburst galaxies) with angular resolutions around 7 seconds revealed that molecular bars with a length of a few kiloparsecs have been formed in the central regions of the galaxies. The molecular bar is interpreted as part of shock waves induced by an oval or barred potential field. By shock dissipation or dissipative cloud-cloud collisions, the molecular gas gains an infall motion and the nuclear star formation activity is fueled. But the distribution and kinematics of the molecular gas in the nuclear regions, which are sites of active star formation, remain unknown. Higher angular resolutions are needed to investigate the gas in the nuclear regions. Researchers made aperture synthesis observations of the nuclear region of the late-type spiral galaxies NGC 6946 and IC 342 with resolutions of 7.6 seconds x 4.2 seconds (P.A. = 147 deg) and 2.4 seconds x 2.3 seconds (P.A. = 149 deg), respectively. The distances to NGC 6496 and IC 342 are assumed to be 5.5 Mpc and 3.9 Mpc, respectively. Researchers have found 100-300 pc nuclear gas disk and ring inside a few kpc molecular gas bars. Researchers present the results of the observations and propose a possible mechanism of active star formation in the nuclear region
Aperture Synthesis CO(J=1-0) Observations and Near-Infrared Photometry of the Non-Barred Seyfert Galaxy NGC 5033
Aperture synthesis observations of CO(J=1-0) emission and near-infrared
broad-band photometry of the non-barred Seyfert galaxy NGC 5033 (D = 18.7 Mpc)
were performed. Our 3".9 x 3".6 resolution CO observations reveal a perturbed
distribution and the kinematics of molecular gas in the center of NGC 5033; we
find the characteristic gaseous features that are widely observed in barred
spiral galaxies, such as two bright CO peaks near the center (separated by ~
3'' or 270 pc from the nucleus), two offset ridges of CO emission emanating
from the CO peaks, and a CO ring (with a radius of ~ 14'' or 1.3 kpc).
Double-peaked velocity profiles are also evident near the two CO peaks,
implying that these CO peaks are orbit crowding zones in a barred/oval
potential. Although NIR data only give an upper limit of the possible bar
lengths, due to a large inclination of the NGC 5033 disk (i = 68 deg), our CO
data clearly suggests the presence of a small (the semi-major axis of about
12'' - 15'' or 1.1 - 1.4 kpc) nuclear bar (or oval structure) in the center of
the ``non-barred'' galaxy NGC 5033. Our results demonstrate that
high-resolution CO imaging-spectroscopy is useful to search for nuclear bars,
even in highly inclined systems where isophoto fitting techniques are not
applicable. We find that the gas mass-to-dynamical mass ratio, M_gas/M_dyn, is
small (< 1%) within a radius of 2'' or 180 pc, in contrast to starburst nuclei.
This implies that the starburst does not cohabitate in the type-1.5 Seyfert
nucleus of N GC 5033.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ. For high
resolution figures see http://www.nro.nao.ac.jp/~f0151kk/n5033
ALMA Observations of the Submillimeter Dense Molecular Gas Tracers in the Luminous Type-1 Active Nucleus of NGC 7469
We present ALMA Cycle 1 observations of the central kpc region of the
luminous type-1 Seyfert galaxy NGC 7469 with unprecedented high resolution
(0.5 0.4 = 165 pc 132 pc) at submillimeter wavelengths.
Utilizing the wide-bandwidth of ALMA, we simultaneously obtained HCN(4-3),
HCO(4-3), CS(7-6), and partially CO(3-2) line maps, as well as the 860
m continuum. The region consists of the central 1 component and
the surrounding starburst ring with a radius of 1.5-2.5. Several
structures connect these components. Except for CO(3-2), these dense gas
tracers are significantly concentrated towards the central 1,
suggesting their suitability to probe the nuclear regions of galaxies. Their
spatial distribution resembles well those of centimeter and mid-infrared
continuum emissions, but it is anti-correlated with the optical one, indicating
the existence of dust obscured star formation. The integrated intensity ratios
of HCN(4-3)/HCO(4-3) and HCN(4-3)/CS(7-6) are higher at the AGN position
than at the starburst ring, which is consistent to our previous findings
(submm-HCN enhancement). However, the HCN(4-3)/HCO(4-3) ratio at the AGN
position of NGC 7469 (1.110.06) is almost half of the corresponding value
of the low-luminosity type-1 Seyfert galaxy NGC 1097 (2.00.2), despite the
more than two orders of magnitude higher X-ray luminosity of NGC 7469. But the
ratio is comparable to that of the close vicinity of the AGN of NGC 1068
( 1.5). Based on these results, we speculate that some other heating
mechanisms than X-ray (e.g., mechanical heating due to AGN jet) can contribute
significantly for shaping the chemical composition in NGC 1097.Comment: Fixed typos in the title. 15 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables: accepted for
publication in ApJ. Comments welcom