We study the CO and the radiocontinuum emission in an active galaxy to
analyze the interplay between the central activity and the molecular gas. We
present new high-resolution observations of the CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) emission
lines, and 3.5 cm and 20 cm radio continuum emission in the central region of
the LINER/starburst galaxy NGC 6764. The galaxy has an outflow morphology in
radio continuum, spatially coincident with the CO and Hα emission, and
centered slightly off the radio continuum peak at the LINER nucleus. The total
molecular gas mass in the center is about 7x10^8 \msun, using a CO luminosity
to total molecular gas conversion factor that is three times lower than the
standard one. CO(1-0) emission is found near the boundaries of the radio
continuum emission cone. The outflow has a projected expansion velocity of 25
km/s relative to the systemic velocity of NGC6764. About 4x 10^6 \msun of
molecular gas is detected in the outflow. The approximate location (~1 kpc) of
the dynamical inner Lindblad resonance has been derived from the rotation
curve. The peak of the CO emission is slightly (< 200 pc) offset from the peak
of the radio continuum.
The molecular gas has most likely been ejected by the stellar winds from the
recent starburst, but the CO line ratios show indication of an interaction with
the AGN. The energy released by the nuclear starburst is sufficient to explain
the observed outflow, even if the data cannot exclude the AGN from being the
major energy source. Comparison of the outflow with hydrodynamical simulations
suggests that the nuclear starburst is 3--7 Myr old and the bubble-like outflow
is still confined and not freely expanding.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&