# Testing the blast-wave AGN feedback scenario in MCG-03-58-007

**Authors:** Mattia Sirressi, Claudia Cicone, Paola Severgnini, Valentina Braito,, Massimo Dotti, Roberto Della Ceca, James Reeves, Gabriele Matzeu, Cristian, Vignali, Lucia Ballo

arXiv: 1906.00985 · 2019-08-21

## TL;DR

This study uses ALMA observations of MCG-03-58-007 to test the blast-wave AGN feedback model, finding that the molecular outflow does not support the energy-conserving scenario despite a powerful X-ray UFO.

## Contribution

First ALMA observations of MCG-03-58-007's molecular gas, providing insights into AGN feedback mechanisms and challenging the energy-conserving outflow model.

## Key findings

- Residual CO emission suggests a low-velocity outflow or a separate rotating structure.
- The molecular outflow's momentum and energy are inconsistent with energy-conserving models.
- Results rule out momentum-boosted molecular outflows in this AGN.

## Abstract

We report the first Atacama large millimeter/submillimeter array observations of MCG-03-58-007, a local ($z=0.03236\pm0.00002$, this work) AGN ($L_{AGN}\sim10^{45}~\rm erg~s^{-1}$), hosting a powerful X-ray ultra-fast ($v=0.1c$) outflow (UFO). The CO(1-0) line emission is observed across $\sim18\,$kpc scales with a resolution of $\sim 1\,\rm kpc$. About 78\% of the CO(1-0) luminosity traces a galaxy-size rotating disk. However, after subtracting the emission due to such rotating disk, we detect with a S/N=20 a residual emission in the central $\sim 4\,$kpc. Such residuals may trace a low velocity ($v_{LOS}=170\,\rm km\,s^{-1}$) outflow. We compare the momentum rate and kinetic power of such putative molecular outflow with that of the X-ray UFO and find $\dot{P}_{out}/\dot{P}_{UFO}=0.3\pm0.2$ and $\dot{E}_{mol}/\dot{E}_{UFO}\sim4\cdot10^{-3}$. This result is at odds with the energy-conserving scenario suggested by the large momentum boosts measured in some other molecular outflows. An alternative interpretation of the residual CO emission would be a compact rotating structure, distinct from the main disk, which would be a factor of $\sim10-100$ more extended and massive than typical circumnuclear disks revealed in Seyferts. However, in both scenarios, our results rule out the hypothesis of a momentum-boosted molecular outflow in this AGN, despite the presence of a powerful X-ray UFO. [Abridged]

## Full text

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## Figures

19 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.00985/full.md

## References

66 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.00985/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.00985