A CO molecular gas wind 340 pc away from the Seyfert 2 nucleus in ESO420-G13 probes an elusive radio jet*
Journal article, 2020

A prominent jet-driven outflow of CO(2-1) molecular gas is found along the kinematic minor axis of the Seyfert 2 galaxy ESO 420-G13, at a distance of 340-600 pc from the nucleus. The wind morphology resembles the characteristic funnel shape, formed by a highly collimated filamentary emission at the base, and likely traces the jet propagation through a tenuous medium, until a bifurcation point at 440 pc. Here the jet hits a dense molecular core and shatters, dispersing the molecular gas into several clumps and filaments within the expansion cone. We also trace the jet in ionised gas within the inner less than or similar to 340 pc using the [NeII](12.8 mu m) line emission, where the molecular gas follows a circular rotation pattern. The wind outflow carries a mass of similar to 8 x 10(6) M-circle dot at an average wind projected speed of similar to 160 km s(-1), which implies a mass outflow rate of similar to 14 M-circle dot yr(-1). Based on the structure of the outflow and the budget of energy and momentum, we discard radiation pressure from the active nucleus, star formation, and supernovae as possible launching mechanisms. ESO 420-G13 is the second case after NGC 1377 where a previously unknown jet is revealed through its interaction with the interstellar medium, suggesting that unknown jets in feeble radio nuclei might be more common than expected. Two possible jet-cloud configurations are discussed to explain an outflow at this distance from the AGN. The outflowing gas will likely not escape, thus a delay in the star formation rather than quenching is expected from this interaction, while the feedback effect would be confined within the central few hundred parsecs of the galaxy.

galaxies: evolution

submillimeter: ISM

galaxies: individual: ESO 420-G13

ISM: jets and outflows

techniques: high angular resolution

galaxies: active

Author

J. A. Fernandez-Ontiveros

National Observatory of Athens

University of La Laguna

Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias

Istituto nazionale di astrofisica (INAF)

K. M. Dasyra

National Observatory of Athens

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

University of Athens

E. Hatziminaoglou

European Southern Observatory Santiago

M. A. Malkan

University of California at Los Angeles

M. Pereira-Santaella

Spanish National Research Council (CSIC)

University of Oxford

M. Papachristou

National Observatory of Athens

University of Athens

L. Spinoglio

Istituto nazionale di astrofisica (INAF)

F. Combes

Sorbonne University

Pierre and Marie Curie University (UPMC)

Susanne Aalto

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Astronomy and Plasmaphysics

N. Nagar

University of Concepcion

M. Imanishi

The Graduate University for Advanced Studies (SOKENDAI)

National Institutes of Natural Sciences

P. Andreani

European Southern Observatory Santiago

C. Ricci

Beijing University of Technology

Diego Portales University

R. Slater

Universidad Andrés Bello

Astronomy and Astrophysics

0004-6361 (ISSN) 1432-0746 (eISSN)

Vol. 633 A127

Subject Categories

Aerospace Engineering

Astronomy, Astrophysics and Cosmology

Fluid Mechanics and Acoustics

DOI

10.1051/0004-6361/201936552

More information

Latest update

10/9/2023