Gas dynamics of the central few parsec region of NGC 1068 fuelled by the evolving nuclear star cluster
M. Schartmann, A. Burkert, M. Krause, M. Camenzind, K. Meisenheimer, and R.I. Davies

TL;DR
This paper combines high-resolution observations and hydrodynamical simulations to study the gas dynamics and star formation in the nuclear region of NGC 1068, linking large-scale inflows to parsec-scale discs.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed simulation framework that connects observed large-scale gas inflows with the formation of dense, turbulent discs on parsec scales in NGC 1068.
Findings
Disc sizes of 0.8-0.9 pc match observations
Gas masses around 1 million solar masses
Mass transfer rates of 0.025 solar masses per year
Abstract
High resolution observations with the NIR adaptive optics integral field spectrograph SINFONI at the VLT proved the existence of massive and young nuclear star clusters in the centres of a sample of Seyfert galaxies. With the help of three-dimensional high resolution hydrodynamical simulations with the Pluto code, we follow the evolution of such clusters, focusing on stellar mass loss. This leads to clumpy or filamentary inflow of gas on large scales (tens of parsec), whereas a turbulent and very dense disc builds up on the parsec scale. In order to capture the relevant physics in the inner region, we treat this disc separately by viscously evolving the radial surface density distribution. This enables us to link the tens of parsec scale region (accessible via SINFONI observations) to the (sub-)parsec scale region (observable with the MIDI instrument and via water maser emission). In…
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