AGN impact on the molecular gas in galactic centers as probed by CO lines
Federico Esposito, Livia Vallini, Francesca Pozzi, Viviana Casasola,, Matilde Mingozzi, Cristian Vignali, Carlotta Gruppioni, Francesco Salvestrini

TL;DR
This study investigates how active galactic nuclei (AGN) influence molecular gas in galaxy centers by analyzing CO emission lines, finding that both star formation and AGN activity contribute to gas heating through complex mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of CO line ratios with PDR and XDR models, revealing the necessity of a mixed mechanism to explain molecular gas excitation in active galaxies.
Findings
No significant AGN impact on cold, low-density gas at kpc scales.
Weak correlations between CO ratios and FUV/X-ray fluxes at 250 pc scale.
PDRs require extremely high densities; XDRs suggest moderate densities.
Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of the X-ray, infrared, and carbon monoxide (CO) emission for a sample of 35 local (), active ( erg s) galaxies. Our goal is to infer the contribution of far-ultraviolet (FUV) radiation from star formation (SF), and X-ray radiation from the active galactic nuclei (AGN), respectively producing photodissociation regions (PDRs) and X-ray dominated regions (XDRs), to the molecular gas heating. To this aim, we exploit the CO spectral line energy distribution (CO SLED) as traced by Herschel, complemented with data from single-dish telescopes for the low-J lines, and high-resolution ALMA images of the mid-J CO emitting region. By comparing our results to the Schmidt-Kennicutt relation, we find no evidence for AGN influence on the cold and low-density gas on kpc-scales. On nuclear (r = 250 pc) scales, we find weak correlations…
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