Inefficient jet-induced star formation in Centaurus A: High resolution ALMA observations of the northern filaments
Quentin Salom\'e, Philippe Salom\'e, Marc-Antoine Miville-Desch\^enes,, Fran\c{c}oise Combes, Stephen Hamer

TL;DR
High-resolution ALMA observations of the northern filaments in Centaurus A reveal that jet-induced molecular gas formation is inefficient for star formation, with strong CO emission but limited star formation activity, indicating positive feedback is not always effective.
Contribution
This study provides the first detailed evidence of inefficient AGN positive feedback in the molecular gas of Centaurus A's filaments using high-resolution ALMA data.
Findings
CO emission is clumpy and distributed in two main structures.
Molecular clouds have similar properties to those in the Milky Way.
High virial parameters suggest kinetic energy inhibits star formation.
Abstract
NGC 5128 is one of the best targets to study AGN-feedback in the local Universe. At 13.5 kpc from the galaxy, optical filaments with recent star formation lie along the radio-jet direction. It is a testbed region for positive feedback (jet-induced star formation). APEX revealed strong CO emission in star-forming regions but also in regions with no detected tracers of star formation. When observed, star formation appears to be inefficient compared to the Kennicutt-Schmidt relation. We used ALMA to map the 12CO(1-0) emission all along the filaments at 1.3"~ 23.8 pc resolution. The CO emission is clumpy and distributed in two main structures: (i) the Horseshoe complex, outside the HI cloud, where gas is mostly excited by shocks and no star formation is observed; (ii) the Vertical filament, at the edge of the HI shell, which is a region of moderate star formation. We identified 140…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
