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A deep Herschel/PACS observation of CO(40-39) in NGC 1068: a search for the molecular torus

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL(2015)

Cited 2|Views40
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Abstract
Emission from high-J CO lines in galaxies has long been proposed as a tracer of X-ray dominated regions (XDRs) produced by active galactic nuclei (AGNs). Of particular interest is the question of whether the obscuring torus, which is required by AGN unification models, can be observed via high-J CO cooling lines. Here we report on the analysis of a deep Herschel/PACS observation of an extremely high-J CO transition (40-39) in the Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 1068. The line was not detected, with a derived 3 sigma upper limit of 2 x 10(-17) W m(-2). We apply an XDR model in order to investigate whether the upper limit constrains the properties of a molecular torus in NGC 1068. The XDR model predicts the CO spectral line energy distributions for various gas densities and illuminating X-ray fluxes. In our model, the CO(40-39) upper limit is matched by gas with densities of similar to 10(6)-10(7) cm(-3), located at 1.6-5 pc from the AGN, with column densities of at least 1025 cm (2). At such high column densities, however, dust absorbs most of the CO(40-39) line emission at lambda = 65.69 mu m. Therefore, even if NGC 1068 has a molecular torus that radiates in the CO(40-39) line, the dust can attenuate the line emission to below the PACS detection limit. The upper limit is thus consistent with the existence of a molecular torus in NGC 1068. In general, we expect that the CO(40-39) is observable in only a few AGN nuclei (if at all), because of the required high gas column density, and absorption by dust.
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Key words
galaxies: active,galaxies: individual (NGC 1068),galaxies: Seyfert
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