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27 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » 0908.3951

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Is cold gas fuelling the radio galaxy NGC 315?
R. Morganti ; A.B. Peck ; T.A. Oosterloo ; G. van Moorsel ; A. Capetti ; R. Fanti ; P. Parma ; H.R. de Ruiter ;
Date 27 Aug 2009
AbstractWe present WSRT, VLA and VLBI observations of the HI absorption in the radio galaxy NGC 315. The main result is that two HI absorbing systems are detected against the central region. In addition to the known highly redshifted, very narrow component, we detect relatively broad (FWZI 150 km/s) absorption. This broad component is redshifted by ~80 km/s compared to the systemic velocity, while the narrow absorption is redshifted ~ 490 km/s. Both HI absorption components are spatially resolved at the pc-scale of the VLBI observations. The broad component shows strong gradients in density (or excitation) and velocity along the jet. We conclude that this gas is physically close to the AGN, although the nature of the gas resulting in the broad absorption is not completely clear. The possibility that it is entrained by the radio jet appears unlikely. Gas located in a thick circum-nuclear toroidal structure cannot be completely ruled out although it appears difficult to reconcile with the observed morphology and kinematics of the HI. A perhaps more likely scenario is that the gas producing the broad absorption could be (directly or indirectly) connected with the fuelling of the AGN, i.e. gas that is falling into the nucleus. If this is the case, the accretion rate derived is similar to that found for other X-ray luminous elliptical galaxies, although lower than that derived from the radio core luminosity for NGC 315. The density distribution of the narrow component is, featureless. Moreover, we detect a small amount of HI in emission a few kpc SW of the AGN, coincident with faint optical absorption features and at velocities very similar to the narrow absorption. This suggests that the gas causing the narrow absorption is not close to the AGN and is more likely caused by clouds falling into NGC 315.
Source arXiv, 0908.3951
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