A Massive Dense Gas Cloud close to the Nucleus of the Seyfert galaxy NGC 1068
Ray S. Furuya, Yoshiaki Taniguchi

TL;DR
This study identifies a massive, dense gas cloud near the nucleus of NGC 1068 using ALMA data, revealing its properties and implications for star formation and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of a dense gas cloud close to NGC 1068's nucleus, linking gas properties to star formation and galactic dynamics.
Findings
Gas mass ~2x10^5 Msun and size ~10 pc.
Gas density ~10^5 cm^{-3}, capable of forming a proto starcluster.
Evidence of episodic star formation and possible past minor merger.
Abstract
Using the ALMA archival data of both CO(6--5) line and 689 GHz continuum emission towards the archetypical Seyfert galaxy, NGC 1068, we identified a distinct continuum peak separated by 14 pc from the nuclear radio component S1 in projection. The continuum flux gives a gas mass of ~2x10^5 Msun and bolometric luminosity of ~10^8 Lsun, leading to a star formation rate of ~0.1 Msun/yr. Subsequent analysis on the line data suggest that the gas has a size of ~10 pc, yielding to mean H2 number density of ~10^5 cm^{-3}. We therefore refer to the gas as "massive dense gas cloud": the gas density is high enough to form a "proto starcluster" whose stellar mass of ~10^4 Msun. We found that the gas stands a unique position between galactic and extraglactic clouds in the diagrams of start formation rate (SFR) vs. gas mass proposed by Lada et al. and surface density of gas vs. SFR density by Krumholz…
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