Molecular Disks in Radio Galaxies: The pathway to ALMA
I. Prandoni, R.A. Laing, H.R. de Ruiter, and P. Parma

TL;DR
This study investigates the presence of cold molecular gas in southern radio galaxies using APEX, aiming to identify targets for future high-resolution ALMA imaging to understand jet fueling mechanisms.
Contribution
First systematic CO observations of southern radio galaxies with APEX, establishing a method to identify candidates for ALMA imaging and exploring cold gas's role in jet fueling.
Findings
Two out of three targets detected in CO(2-1) emission.
Evidence of ordered rotation in detected CO lines.
APEX effectively detects CO in nearby radio galaxies.
Abstract
Context. It has recently been proposed that the jets of low-luminosity radio galaxies are powered by direct accretion of the hot phase of the IGM onto the central black hole. Cold gas remains a plausible alternative fuel supply, however. The most compelling evidence that cold gas plays a role in fueling radio galaxies is that dust is detected more commonly and/or in larger quantities in (elliptical) radio galaxies compared with radio-quiet elliptical galaxies. On the other hand, only small numbers of radio galaxies have yet been detected in CO (and even fewer imaged), and whether or not all radio galaxies have enough cold gas to fuel their jets remains an open question. If so, then the dynamics of the cold gas in the nuclei of radio galaxies may provide important clues to the fuelling mechanism. Aims. The only instrument capable of imaging the molecular component on scales relevant to…
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