Detection of 183 GHz water megamaser emission towards NGC 4945
Elizabeth Humphreys, Wouter Vlemmings, Violette Impellizzeri, Maud, Galametz, Michael Olberg, John Conway, Victor Belitsky, Carlos De Breuck

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of a powerful 183 GHz water megamaser in NGC 4945, indicating that millimetre/submillimetre water masers can probe the inner regions of AGN more effectively than previous methods.
Contribution
First detection of 183 GHz water megamaser emission in NGC 4945, demonstrating its potential to explore AGN central engine structures at higher frequencies.
Findings
Detected 183 GHz water maser with >1000 Lsun luminosity
183 GHz emission likely originates from the AGN central engine
Higher velocity features suggest emission closer to the black hole
Abstract
Aim: The aim of this work is to search Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 4945, a well-known 22 GHz water megamaser galaxy, for water (mega)maser emission at 183 GHz. Method: We used APEX SEPIA Band 5 to perform the observations. Results: We detected 183 GHz water maser emission towards NGC 4945 with a peak flux density of ~3 Jy near the galactic systemic velocity. The emission spans a velocity range of several hundred km/s. We estimate an isotropic luminosity of > 1000 Lsun, classifying the emission as a megamaser. A comparison of the 183 GHz spectrum with that observed at 22 GHz suggests that 183 GHz emission also arises from the active galactic nucleus (AGN) central engine. If the 183 GHz emission originates from the circumnuclear disk, then we estimate that a redshifted feature at 1084 km/s in the spectrum should arise from a distance of 0.022 pc from the supermassive black hole (1.6 x 10(5)…
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