Discovery of an AGN-Driven Molecular Outflow in the Local Early-Type Galaxy NGC 1266
Katherine Alatalo, Leo Blitz, Lisa M. Young, Timothy A. Davis, Martin, Bureau, Laura A. Lopez, Michele Cappellari, Nicholas Scott, Kristen L., Shapiro, Alison F. Crocker, Sergio Martin, Maxime Bois, Frederic Bournaud,, Roger L. Davies, P. T. de Zeeuw, Pierre-Alain Duc

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a powerful AGN-driven molecular outflow in the nearby galaxy NGC 1266, characterized by a massive central molecular component and an outflow rate of 13 solar masses per year, without signs of recent interaction.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of an outflow in a galaxy lacking recent interactions, driven by an active galactic nucleus rather than star formation.
Findings
Molecular outflow rate of 13 Msun/yr
Massive central molecular component of 1.1x10^9 Msun
No recent galaxy interaction evidence
Abstract
We report the discovery of a powerful molecular wind from the nucleus of the non-interacting nearby S0 field galaxy NGC 1266. The single-dish CO profile exhibits emission to +/- 400 km/s and requires a nested Gaussian fit to be properly described. Interferometric observations reveal a massive, centrally- concentrated molecular component with a mass of 1.1x10^9 Msuns and a molecular outflow with a molecular mass of 2.4x10^7 Msuns. The molecular gas close to the systemic velocity consists of a rotating, compact nucleus with a mass of about 4.1x108 Msuns within a radius of approximately 60 pc. This compact molecular nucleus has a surface density of \approx 2.7 \times 10^4 Msuns/pc^2, more than two orders of magnitude larger than that of giant molecular clouds in the disk of the Milky Way, and it appears to sit on the Kennicutt-Schmidt relation despite its extreme kinematics and energetic…
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