Turbulent and fast motions of H2 gas in active galactic nuclei
K. M. Dasyra, F. Combes

TL;DR
This study identifies highly turbulent warm molecular hydrogen gas in specific active galactic nuclei, suggesting outflows driven by jets or nuclear activity, with implications for understanding AGN feedback mechanisms.
Contribution
First detection of highly turbulent warm H2 gas in certain AGN, linking gas motions to jets or outflows rather than shocks, and quantifying the gas mass involved.
Findings
Some AGN show H2 velocity dispersions >200 km/s.
Detection of a high-velocity blue wing indicating outflow in 4C12.50.
Warm H2 gas mass in outflow is significant but less than cold H2 mass.
Abstract
Querying the Spitzer archive for optically-selected active galactic nuclei (AGN) observed in high-resolution mode spectroscopy, we identified radio and/or interacting galaxies with highly turbulent motions of the H2 gas at a temperature of a few hundred Kelvin. Unlike all other AGN that have unresolved H2 line profiles at a spectral resolution of ~600, 3C236, 3C293, IRAS09039+0503, MCG-2-58-22, and Mrk463E have intrinsic velocity dispersions exceeding 200 km/s for at least two of the rotational S0, S1, S2, and S3 lines. In a sixth source, 4C12.50, a blue wing was detected in the S1 and S2 line profiles, indicating the presence of a warm molecular gas component moving at -640 km/s with respect to the bulk of the gas at systemic velocity. Its mass is 5.2*10^7 M_sun, accounting for more than one fourth of the H2 gas at 374K, but less than 1% of the cold H2 gas computed from CO…
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