# Multiphase gas flows in the nearby Seyfert galaxy ESO428-G14

**Authors:** C. Feruglio, G. Fabbiano, M. Bischetti, M. Elvis, A. Travascio, F., Fiore

arXiv: 1904.01483 · 2020-02-19

## TL;DR

This study uses ALMA observations to analyze molecular gas distribution, kinematics, and outflows in the Seyfert galaxy ESO428-G14, revealing gas inflows, obscuration sources, and nuclear outflows linked to AGN activity.

## Contribution

First detailed ALMA imaging of molecular gas dynamics and outflows in ESO428-G14, linking gas inflow, obscuration, and outflow processes in a Seyfert galaxy.

## Key findings

- Molecular gas forms a rotating disk with a circum-nuclear ring.
- Detected a bi-conical molecular outflow with 700 pc size.
- Inner CO bar shows inflow towards the AGN, overlapping with obscured regions.

## Abstract

We present ALMA rest-frame 230 GHz continuum and CO(2-1) line observations of the nearby Compton-thick Seyfert galaxy ESO428-G14, with angular resolution 0.7 arcsec (78 pc). We detect CO(2-1) emission from spiral arms and a circum-nuclear ring with 200 pc radius, and from a transverse gas lane with size of $\sim100$ pc, which crosses the nucleus and connects the two portions the circumnuclear ring. The molecular gas in the host galaxy is distributed in a rotating disk with intrinsic circular velocity $v_{rot}=135$ km/s, inclination $i=57$ deg, and dynamical mass $M_{dyn }=5\times 10^9~\rm M_{\odot}$ within a radius of $\sim 1$ kpc. In the inner 100 pc region CO is distributed in a equatorial bar, whose kinematics is highly perturbed and consistent with an inflow of gas towards the AGN. This inner CO bar overlaps with the most obscured, Compton-thick region seen in X-rays. We derive a column density of $\rm N(H_2) \approx 2\times10^{23}~ cm^{-2}$ in this region, suggesting that molecular gas may contribute significantly to the AGN obscuration. We detect a molecular outflow with a total outflow rate $\rm \dot M_{of}\approx 0.8~M_{\odot}/yr$, distributed along a bi-conical structure with size of $700$ pc on both sides of the AGN. The bi-conical outflow is also detected in the $\rm H_2$ emission line at 2.12 $\mu$m, which traces a warmer nuclear outflow located within 170 pc from the AGN. This suggests that the outflow cools with increasing distance from the AGN. We find that the hard X-ray emitting nuclear region mapped with Chandra is CO-deprived, but filled with warm molecular gas traced by $\rm H_2$ - thus confirming that the hard (3-6 keV) continuum and Fe K$\alpha$ emission are due to scattering from dense neutral clouds in the ISM.

## Full text

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## Figures

18 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.01483/full.md

## References

32 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.01483/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.01483