Resolving the complex structure of the dust torus in the active nucleus of the Circinus galaxy
K. R. W. Tristram (1), K. Meisenheimer (1), W. Jaffe (2), M., Schartmann (1), H.-W. Rix (1), Ch. Leinert (1), S. Morel (3), M. Wittkowski, (4), H. R\"ottgering (2), G. Perrin (5), B. Lopez (6), D. Raban (2), W. D., Cotton (7), U. Graser (1), F. Paresce (4), Th. Henning (1) ((1)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution mid-infrared interferometry to reveal a complex, clumpy dust torus in the Circinus galaxy's active nucleus, supporting unified models of Seyfert galaxies.
Contribution
First direct interferometric imaging of the dust structure in Circinus, demonstrating a two-component, irregular torus consistent with clumpy models.
Findings
Dust distribution comprises a dense disk and a thicker torus.
Evidence of a clumpy, irregular dust structure.
Torus collimates ionising radiation, confirming unified AGN models.
Abstract
To test the dust torus model for active galactic nuclei directly, we study the extent and morphology of the nuclear dust distribution in the Circinus galaxy using high resolution interferometric observations in the mid-infrared with the MIDI instrument at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer. We find that the dust distribution in the nucleus of Circinus can be explained by two components, a dense and warm disk-like component of 0.4 pc size and a slightly cooler, geometrically thick torus component with a size of 2.0 pc. The disk component is oriented perpendicular to the ionisation cone and outflow and seems to show the silicate feature at 10 micron in emission. It coincides with a nuclear maser disk in orientation and size. From the energy needed to heat the dust, we infer a luminosity of the accretion disk corresponding to 20% of the Eddington luminosity of the nuclear black hole.…
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