Molecular line emission in NGC1068 imaged with ALMA. I An AGN-driven outflow in the dense molecular gas
S. Garcia-Burillo, F. Combes, A. Usero, S. Aalto, M. Krips, S. Viti,, A. Alonso-Herrero, L. K. Hunt, E. Schinnerer, A. J. Baker, F. Boone V., Casasola, L. Colina, F. Costagliola, A. Eckart, A. Fuente, C. Henkel, A., Labiano, S. Martin, I. Marquez, S. Muller, P. Planesas

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA to image molecular gas in NGC1068, revealing an AGN-driven outflow that impacts the galaxy's central region and star formation activity.
Contribution
First detailed ALMA imaging of dense molecular gas tracers in NGC1068 showing AGN-driven outflows and feedback effects.
Findings
Detected a massive outflow in molecular gas extending from 50 to 400 pc.
The outflow rate exceeds star formation rate, indicating AGN feedback dominates gas depletion.
Outflow power matches the AGN's energy output, confirming AGN-driven feedback.
Abstract
We investigate the fueling and the feedback of star formation and nuclear activity in NGC1068, a nearby (D=14Mpc) Seyfert 2 barred galaxy, by analyzing the distribution and kinematics of the molecular gas in the disk. We have used ALMA to map the emission of a set of dense molecular gas tracers (CO(3-2), CO(6-5), HCN(4-3), HCO+(4-3) and CS(7-6)) and their underlying continuum emission in the central r ~ 2kpc of NGC1068 with spatial resolutions ~ 0.3"-0.5" (~ 20-35pc). Molecular line and dust continuum emissions are detected from a r ~ 200pc off-centered circumnuclear disk (CND), from the 2.6kpc-diameter bar region, and from the r ~ 1.3kpc starburst (SB) ring. Most of the emission in HCO+, HCN and CS stems from the CND. Molecular line ratios show dramatic order-of-magnitude changes inside the CND that are correlated with the UV/X-ray illumination by the AGN, betraying ongoing feedback.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
