The quenching of star formation in accretion-driven clumpy turbulent tori of active galactic nuclei
B. Vollmer (1), R.I. Davies (2) ((1) CDS, Observatoire astronomique de, Strasbourg, France, (2) Max Planck Insitut fuer extraterrestrische Physik,, Garching, Germany)

TL;DR
This paper presents a model explaining how external gas accretion and adiabatic compression in turbulent, clumpy gas disks of active galactic nuclei lead to star formation quenching, consistent with observations of galactic centers.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model linking external gas infall and turbulence to star formation suppression in AGN tori, supported by observational data.
Findings
Model matches observed properties of galactic center gas clouds.
External accretion rates can quench star formation in gas tori.
Turbulence driven by external infall explains low star formation activity.
Abstract
Galactic gas-gas collisions involving a turbulent multiphase ISM share common ISM properties: dense extraplanar gas visible in CO, large linewidths (>= 50 km/s), strong mid-infrared H_2 line emission, low star formation activity, and strong radio continuum emission. Gas-gas collisions can occur in the form of ICM ram pressure stripping, galaxy head-on collisions, compression of the intragroup gas and/or galaxy ISM by an intruder galaxy which flies through the galaxy group at a high velocity, or external gas accretion on an existing gas torus in a galactic center. We suggest that the common theme of all these gas-gas interactions is adiabatic compression of the ISM leading to an increase of the turbulent velocity dispersion of the gas. The turbulent gas clouds are then overpressured and star formation is quenched. Within this scenario we developed a model for turbulent clumpy gas disks…
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