ALMA imaging of the cold molecular and dusty disk in the type 2 active nucleus of the Circinus galaxy
Konrad R. W. Tristram (1), C. M. Violette Impellizzeri (2), Zhi-Yu, Zhang (3, 4), Eric Villard (5), Christian Henkel (6, 7, 8), Serena Viti, (2), Leonard Burtscher (2), Fran\c{c}oise Combes (9), Santiago, Garc\'ia-Burillo (10), Sergio Mart\'in (1, 11), Klaus Meisenheimer (12),

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA imaging to analyze the cold molecular and dusty disk in the nucleus of the Circinus galaxy, revealing a complex structure with a small torus and extended spiral features.
Contribution
First high-resolution ALMA observations of the Circinus galaxy's nucleus revealing detailed molecular and dust structures, including a small torus and spiral arms, challenging previous polar extension claims.
Findings
The dusty disk is cold and exhibits spiral arms on 25pc scales.
A small, unresolved torus of dense gas is detected at the nucleus.
The nucleus comprises a warm ionized outflow and a cold molecular disk.
Abstract
We aim to shed light on the physical properties and kinematics of the molecular material in the nucleus of one of the closest type 2 active galaxies. To this end, we obtained high angular resolution ALMA observations of the nucleus of the Circinus galaxy. The observations map the emission at 350GHz and 690GHz with spatial resolutions of ~3.8pc and ~2.2pc, respectively. The continuum emission traces cold (K) dust in a circumnuclear disk with spiral arms on scales of 25pc, plus a marginally resolved nuclear emission peak. The latter is not extended in polar direction as claimed based on earlier ALMA observations. A significant amount (of the order of 40%) of the 350GHz emission is not related to dust, but most likely free-free emission instead. We detect CO(3-2) and CO(6-5) as well as HCO(4-3), HCN(4-3), and CS(4-3). The CO emission is extended, showing a spiral…
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