Molecular Gas in NUclei of GAlaxies (NUGA): IV. Gravitational Torques and AGN Feeding
S. Garcia-Burillo (1), F. Combes (2), E. Schinnerer (3), F. Boone (4),, L. K. Hunt (5) ((1) OAN, Madrid, Spain, (2) LERMA, Paris, France, (3) MPIA,, Heidelberg, Germany, (4) MPIfR, Bonn, Germany, (5) CNR, Firenze, Italy)

TL;DR
This study investigates how stellar gravity torques influence gas inflow in low luminosity AGN, revealing that torques often hinder feeding close to the nucleus and proposing mechanisms for recurrent activity episodes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of stellar gravity torques' role in AGN feeding, highlighting the potential barriers and proposing a combined evolutionary scenario involving viscosity and transient agents.
Findings
Gravity torques are mostly positive within 200pc, preventing inflow.
Viscosity can counteract gravity torques on nuclear rings.
Recurrent activity episodes are linked to bar instabilities.
Abstract
We discuss the efficiency of stellar gravity torques as a mechanism to account for the feeding of the central engines of four low luminosity AGN: NGC4321, NGC4826, NGC4579 and NGC6951. These galaxies have been observed as part of the NUGA CO project, aimed at the study of AGN fueling mechanisms. Our calculations allow us to derive the characteristic time-scales for gas flows and discuss whether torques from the stellar potentials are efficient enough to drain the gas angular momentum in the inner 1 kpc of these galaxies. Results indicate paradoxically that feeding should be thwarted close to the AGN: in the four cases analyzed, gravity torques are mostly positive inside r~200pc, resulting in no inflow on these scales. As a possible solution for the paradox, we speculate that the agent responsible for driving inflow to still smaller radii is transient and thus presently absent in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
