Molecular line emission in NGC1068 imaged with ALMA: II. The chemistry of the dense molecular gas
S. Viti, S. Garc\'ia-Burillo, A. Fuente, L. K. Hunt, A. Usero, C., Henkel, A. Eckart, S. Martin, M. Spaans, S. Muller, F. Combes, M. Krips, E., Schinnerer, V. Casasola, F. Costagliola, I. Marquez, P. Planesas, P. P. van, der Werf, S. Aalto, A. J. Baker, F. Boone, L. J. Tacconi

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA and PdBI data to analyze the dense molecular gas in NGC1068's circumnuclear disk and starburst ring, revealing complex chemistry, physical conditions, and multiple gas phases.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive multi-molecular analysis of the dense gas in NGC1068, highlighting chemical differentiation and the need for multi-phase models.
Findings
The gas in the CND is very dense (>10^5 cm^-3) and hot (>150K).
Chemical differentiation exists across the CND and between the CND and starburst ring.
Single-model chemical reproduction is unsuccessful, indicating multiple gas phases.
Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of ALMA Bands 7 and 9 data of CO, HCO+, HCN and CS, augmented with Plateau de Bure Interferometer (PdBI) data of the ~ 200 pc circumnuclear disk (CND) and the ~ 1.3 kpc starburst ring (SB ring) of NGC~1068, a nearby (D = 14 Mpc) Seyfert 2 barred galaxy. We aim at determining the physical characteristics of the dense gas present in the CND and whether the different line intensity ratios we find within the CND as well as between the CND and the SB ring are due to excitation effects (gas density and temperature differences) or to a different chemistry. We estimate the column densities of each species in Local Thermodynamic Equilibrium (LTE). We then compute large one-dimensional non-LTE radiative transfer grids (using RADEX) by using first only the CO transitions, and then all the available molecules in order to constrain the densities, temperatures and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
