The effect of stellar feedback on the formation and evolution of gas and dust tori in AGN
M. Schartmann, K. Meisenheimer, H. Klahr, M. Camenzind, S. Wolf and, Th. Henning

TL;DR
This study models how stellar feedback from nuclear star clusters influences the formation of gas and dust structures in AGN, reproducing observed features like thick tori and spectral properties.
Contribution
It introduces a hydrodynamical model demonstrating that stellar feedback can produce two-component gas and dust structures consistent with observations of AGN.
Findings
Reproduces observed neutral hydrogen column densities in Seyfert galaxies.
Models the spectral energy distributions of intermediate Seyfert galaxies.
Shows a two-component structure with a turbulent disk and filamentary surroundings.
Abstract
Recently, the existence of geometrically thick dust structures in Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) has been directly proven with the help of mid-infrared interferometry. The observations are consistent with a two-component model made up of a geometrically thin and warm central disk, surrounded by a colder, fluffy torus component. In an exploratory study, we investigate one possible physical mechanism, which could produce such a structure, namely the effect of stellar feedback from a young nuclear star cluster on the interstellar medium in centres of AGN. The model is realised with the help of the hydrodynamics code TRAMP. We follow the evolution of the interstellar medium by taking discrete mass loss and energy ejection due to stellar processes, as well as optically thin radiative cooling into account. In a post-processing step, we calculate observable quantities (spectral energy…
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