Thick turbulent gas disks with magnetocentrifugal winds in active galactic nuclei - Model infrared emission and optical polarization
B. Vollmer (1), M. Schartmann (2,3,4), L. Burtscher (2,5), F. Marin, (1), S. Hoenig (6), R. Davies (2), R. Goosmann (1) ((1) Observatoire, astronomique de Strasbourg, (2) Max-Planck-Institut fuesr extraterrestrische, Physik, Garching, (3) University Observatory Munich

TL;DR
This paper presents a model for the inner regions of active galactic nuclei, incorporating thick gas disks and magnetocentrifugal winds, to explain observed infrared emission, polarization, and dust structures.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive 3D model combining magnetized gas disks and winds, successfully reproducing various observational features of AGN.
Findings
Magnetocentrifugal winds can explain polar dust elongation.
Model reproduces IR SED and interferometric observations.
Outflows account for molecular outflows and wind velocities.
Abstract
(Abridged) Infrared high-resolution imaging and interferometry have shown that the dust distribution is frequently elongated along the polar direction of an AGN. To explain these findings, we developed a model scenario for the inner ~30 pc of an AGN. We assume a rotating thick gas disk between about one and ten parsec. External gas accretion adds mass and injects energy via gas compression into this gas disk and drives turbulence. Our disks are assumed to be strongly magnetized via equipartition between the turbulent gas pressure and the energy density of the magnetic field. In a second step, we built three dimensional density cubes based on the analytical model, illuminated them with a central source, and made radiative transfer calculations. In a third step, we calculated MIR visibility amplitudes and compared them to available interferometric observations. We show that…
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