ALMA imaging of C2H emission in the disk of NGC1068
S. Garcia-Burillo, S. Viti, F. Combes, A. Fuente, A. Usero, L. K., Hunt, S. Martin, M. Krips, S. Aalto, R. Aladro, C. Ramos Almeida, A., Alonso-Herrero, V. Casasola, C. Henkel, M. Querejeta, R. Neri, F., Costagliola, L. J. Tacconi, P. P. van der Werf

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA to map C2H emission in NGC1068, revealing its distribution and abundance variations linked to starburst and outflow regions, and models the chemistry to understand the molecular gas conditions influenced by feedback processes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed ALMA mapping of C2H in NGC1068 and develops chemical models to explain its abundance variations across different galactic environments.
Findings
C2H emission is strongest in the circumnuclear disk and connects to the outer disk.
Fractional abundances of C2H vary from 10^-8 to 10^-7, indicating different chemical regimes.
High C2H abundances in outflows suggest transient, shock-related chemistry.
Abstract
We study the feedback of star formation and nuclear activity on the chemistry of molecular gas in NGC1068, a nearby (D=14Mpc) Seyfert 2 barred galaxy, by analyzing if the abundances of key molecular species like ethynyl (C2H), a classical tracer of PDR, change in the different environments of the disk of the galaxy. We have used ALMA to map the emission of the hyperfine multiplet of C2H(N=1-0) and its underlying continuum emission in the central r~35"(2.5kpc)-region of the disk of NGC1068 with a spatial resolution 1.0"x0.7"(50-70pc). We have developed a set of time-dependent chemical models to determine the origin of the C2H gas. A sizeable fraction of the total C2H line emission is detected from the r~1.3kpc starburst (SB) ring. However, the brightest C2H emission originates from a r~200pc off-centered circumnuclear disk (CND), where evidence of a molecular outflow has been previously…
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