A low-luminosity type-1 QSO sample: IV. Molecular gas contents and conditions of star formation in three nearby Seyfert galaxies
Lydia Moser, Melanie Krips, Gerold Busch, Julia Scharwaechter, Sabine, Koenig, Andreas Eckart, Semir Smajic, Macarena Garcia-Marin, Monica, Valencia-S., Sebastian Fischer, and Jens Dierkes

TL;DR
This study investigates molecular gas properties and star formation conditions in three nearby Seyfert galaxies, revealing high excitation, turbulence, and intense star formation activity in their centers, contributing to understanding low-luminosity AGN environments.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution molecular line observations of low-luminosity Seyfert galaxies, highlighting their gas excitation, turbulence, and starburst characteristics, which were previously less understood.
Findings
Molecular gas is concentrated within <1.8 kpc in all three galaxies.
Line ratios indicate higher excitation and turbulence similar to starbursts and (U)LIRGs.
Galaxies exhibit signs of intense, circumnuclear star formation activity.
Abstract
We present a pilot study of ~ 3" resolution observations of low CO transitions with the Submillimeter Array in three nearby Seyfert galaxies, which are part of the low-luminosity quasi-stellar object (LLQSOs) sample consisting of 99 nearby (z = 0.06) type-1 active galactic nuclei (AGN) taken from the Hamburg/ESO quasi-stellar object (QSO) survey. Two sources were observed in 12CO(2-1) and 13CO(2-1) and the third in 12CO(3-2) and HCO+(4-3). None of the sources is detected in continuum emission. More than 80% of the 12CO detected molecular gas is concentrated within a diameter (FWHM) < 1.8 kpc. 13CO is tentatively detected, while HCO+ emission could not be detected. All three objects show indications of a kinematically decoupled central unresolved molecular gas component. The molecular gas masses of the three galaxies are in the range M_mol = (0.7 - 8.7) x 10^9 M_sun. We give lower limits…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
