The Role of Molecular Gas in Obscuring Seyfert Active Galactic Nuclei
E. K. S. Hicks (1), R. I. Davies (1), M. A. Malkan (2), R. Genzel, (1,3), L. J. Tacconi (1), F. Muller Sanchez (1), A. Sternberg (4) ((1) Max, Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics,(2) UC Los Angeles,(3) UC, Berkeley, (4) Tel Aviv University)

TL;DR
This study reveals that molecular gas in local Seyfert galaxies forms a thick, clumpy disk capable of obscuring the active nucleus, with properties linked to star formation and potential dynamic inflows.
Contribution
It provides detailed spatial and kinematic analysis of molecular gas in Seyfert nuclei, highlighting its role in obscuration and connection to star formation.
Findings
Molecular gas forms a ~30 pc thick, clumpy disk around the nucleus.
Gas column densities can obscure the AGN at optical/infrared wavelengths.
Velocity dispersion correlates with star formation rate.
Abstract
In a sample of local active galactic nuclei studied at a spatial resolution on the order of 10 pc we show that the interstellar medium traced by the molecular hydrogen v=1-0 S(1) 2.1um line forms a geometrically thick, clumpy disk. The kinematics of the molecular gas reveals general rotation, although an additional significant component of random bulk motion is required by the high local velocity dispersion. The size scale of the typical gas disk is found to have a radius of ~30 pc with a comparable vertical height. Within this radius the average gas mass is estimated to be ~10^7 Msun based on a typical gas mass fraction of 10%, which suggests column densities of Nh ~ 5x10^23 cm^-2. Extinction of the stellar continuum within this same region suggest lower column densities of Nh ~ 2x10^22 cm^-2, indicating that the gas distribution on these scales is dominated by dense clumps. In half of…
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