Centaurus A: morphology and kinematics of the atomic hydrogen
C. Struve(1,2), T.A. Oosterloo(1,2), R. Morganti(1,2), L., Saripalli(3,4) ((1) Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy (2) Kapteyn, Institute, University of Groningen (3) Raman Research Institute (4) CSIRO,, Australia Telescope National Facility)

TL;DR
This study provides detailed imaging and analysis of neutral hydrogen in Centaurus A, revealing a warped, rotating disk with no large-scale anomalies, supporting a merger origin and offering insights into the galaxy's kinematic structure.
Contribution
It offers high-resolution, sensitive observations of HI in Centaurus A, modeling its warped disk and clarifying its kinematic properties with implications for galaxy merger history.
Findings
HI extends for ~15kpc with regular rotation
Warped disk structure consistent with recent stellar light data
No large-scale kinematic anomalies related to AGN fueling
Abstract
We present new ATCA 21-cm line observations of the neutral hydrogen in the nearby radio galaxy Centaurus A. We image in detail (with a resolution down to 7", ~100pc) the distribution of HI along the dust lane. Our data have better velocity resolution and better sensitivity than previous observations. The HI extends for a total of ~15kpc. The data, combined with a titled-ring model of the disk, allow to conclude that the kinematics of the HI is that of a regularly rotating, highly warped structure down to the nuclear scale. The parameters (in particular the inclination) of our model are somewhat different from some of the previously proposed models but consistent with what was recently derived from stellar light in a central ring. The model nicely describes also the morphology of the dust lane as observed with Spitzer. There are no indications that large-scale anomalies in the kinematics…
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