Eccentricity of masing disks in Active Galactic Nuclei
Philip J. Armitage

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution of eccentricity in maser disks around active galactic nuclei, showing that damping occurs over tens of millions of years and affects geometric distance measurements.
Contribution
It introduces a time-dependent linear theory model to study eccentricity damping in AGN maser disks, highlighting the potential for residual eccentricity during observations.
Findings
Eccentricity damping timescale is about 10 Myr at 0.1 pc.
Full circularization may take up to 50 Myr depending on viscosity.
Eccentricity waves can slow down the damping process.
Abstract
Observations of Keplerian disks of masers in NCG 4258 and other Seyfert galaxies can be used to obtain geometric distance estimates and derive the Hubble constant. The ultimate precision of such measurements could be limited by uncertainties in the disk geometry. Using a time-dependent linear theory model, we study the evolution of a thin initially eccentric disk under conditions appropriate to sub-pc scales in Active Galactic Nuclei. The evolution is controlled by a combination of differential precession driven by the disk potential and propagating eccentricity waves that are damped by viscosity. A simple estimate yields a circularization timescale of approximately 10 Myr at 0.1 pc. Numerical solutions for the eccentricity evolution confirm that damping commences on this timescale, but show that the subsequent decay rate of the eccentricity depends upon the uncertain strength of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
