A proto-pseudobulge in ESO 320-G030 fed by a massive molecular inflow driven by a nuclear bar
Eduardo Gonz\'alez-Alfonso, Miguel Pereira-Santaella, Jacqueline, Fischer, Santiago Garc\'ia-Burillo, Chentao Yang, Almudena Alonso-Herrero,, Luis Colina, Matthew L. N. Ashby, Howard A. Smith, Fernando Rico-Villas,, Jes\'us Mart\'in-Pintado, Sara Cazzoli, Kenneth P. Stewart

TL;DR
This study reveals a proto-pseudobulge in galaxy ESO 320-G030, driven by a massive molecular inflow from a nuclear bar, with detailed multi-component modeling of the nuclear region and inflow rates comparable to star formation, indicating rapid secular evolution.
Contribution
First detailed multi-component radiative transfer modeling of the nuclear region in ESO 320-G030, linking molecular inflow driven by a nuclear bar to proto-pseudobulge formation.
Findings
Nuclear inflow rate up to ~30 Msun/yr matches star formation rate.
Three nuclear components account for 70% of galaxy's IR luminosity.
Inflow timescale of ~20 Myr suggests quick secular evolution.
Abstract
Galaxies with nuclear bars are believed to efficiently drive gas inward, generating a nuclear starburst and possibly an active galactic nucleus (AGN). We confirm this scenario for the isolated, double-barred, luminous infrared galaxy ESO 320-G030 based on an analysis of Herschel and ALMA spectroscopic observations. Herschel/PACS and SPIRE observations of ESO 320-G030 show absorption/emission in 18 lines of H2O, which we combine with the ALMA H2O 423-330 448 GHz line (Eupper~400 K) and continuum images to study the nuclear region. Radiative transfer models indicate that 3 nuclear components are required to account for the H2O and continuum data. An envelope, with R~130-150 pc, T_dust~50 K, and N_H2~2x10^{23} cm^{-2}, surrounds a nuclear disk with R~40 pc and tau_100um~1.5-3 (N_H2~2x10^{24} cm^{-2}) and an extremely compact (R~12 pc), warm (~100 K), and buried (tau_100um>5,…
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