Is the Bardeen-Petterson effect responsible for the warping and precession in NGC 4258?
Anderson Caproni (Nucleo de Astrofisica Teorica-UNICSUL, IAG/USP,, STScI), Zulema Abraham (IAG/USP), Mario Livio (STScI), Herman J. Mosquera, Cuesta (ICRA-BR/CBPF)

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether the relativistic Bardeen-Petterson effect caused by a Kerr black hole can explain the observed warping and precession of the accretion disc in NGC 4258, using observational data and numerical simulations.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the Bardeen-Petterson effect can produce disc warping and precession consistent with observations of NGC 4258, suggesting it as a plausible physical mechanism.
Findings
The Bardeen-Petterson radius is comparable to or smaller than the inner maser disc radius.
Numerical simulations show a warped transition region similar to NGC 4258.
The effect can align the disc within a few billion years and explain the observed jet precession.
Abstract
Strong evidence for the presence of a warped Keplerian accretion disc in NGC4258 (M 106) has been inferred from the kinematics of water masers detected at sub-parsec scales. Assuming a power-law accretion disc and using constraints on the disc parameters derived from observational data, we have analyzed the relativistic Bardeen-Petterson effect driven by a Kerr black hole as the potential physical mechanism responsible for the disc warping. We found that the Bardeen-Petterson radius is comparable to or smaller than the inner radius of the maser disc (independent of the allowed value for the black hole spin parameter). Numerical simulations for a wide range of physical conditions have shown that the evolution of a misaligned disc due to the Bardeen-Petterson torques usually produces an inner flat disc and a warped transition region with a smooth gradient in the tilt and twist angles.…
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