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The gentle monster PDS 456: Kiloparsec-scale molecular outflow and its implications for QSO feedback

Authors :
Marcella Brusa
M. Bischetti
Chiara Feruglio
Fabrizio Fiore
Luca Zappacosta
C. Vignali
Enrico Piconcelli
Giovanni Cresci
Alessandro Marconi
Emanuele Nardini
Vincenzo Mainieri
Angela Bongiorno
S. Carniani
Claudia Cicone
Roberto Maiolino
Maiolino, Roberto [0000-0002-4985-3819]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Bischetti, Manuela
Piconcelli, Enrico
Feruglio, Chiara
Fiore, Fabrizio
Carniani, S.
Brusa, M.
Cicone, Claudia
Vignali, C.
Bongiorno, Angela
Cresci, Giovanni
Mainieri, V.
Maiolino, R.
Marconi, Alessandro
Nardini, Emanuele
Zappacosta, Luca
Bischetti M., Piconcelli E., Feruglio C., Fiore F., Carniani S., Brusa M., Cicone C., Vignali C., Bongiorno A., Cresci G., Mainieri V., Maiolino R., Marconi A., Nardini E., Zappacosta L.
ITA
GBR
DEU
Bischetti, M.
Piconcelli, E.
Feruglio, C.
Fiore, F.
Cicone, C.
Bongiorno, A.
Cresci, G.
Marconi, A.
Nardini, E.
Zappacosta, L.
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
EDP Sciences, 2019.

Abstract

We report on the first ALMA observation of the CO(3$-$2) and rest-frame ~340 GHz continuum emission in PDS 456, which is the most luminous, radio-quiet QSO in the local Universe ($z$~0.18), with a bolometric luminosity $L_{\rm Bol}\sim10^{47}$ erg s$^{-1}$. ALMA angular resolution allowed us to map scales as small as ~700 pc. The molecular gas reservoir, traced by the core of the very bright CO(3$-$2) emission line, is distributed in a compact rotating disk, with size of ~1.3 kpc, seen close to face-on ($i$~25 deg). Fast CO(3$-$2) emission in the velocity range $v\in[-1000,+500]$ km s$^{-1}$ is also present. Specifically, we detect several blue-shifted clumps out to ~5 kpc from the nucleus, in addition to a compact ($R\lesssim1.2$ kpc), broad emission component. These components reveal a galaxy-wide molecular outflow, with a total mass $M_{\rm mol}^{\rm out}\sim2.5\times10^8$ $M_{\odot}$ and a mass outflow rate $\dot{M}_{\rm mol}\sim290$ $M_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$. The corresponding depletion time is ~8 Myr, shorter than the rate at which the molecular gas is converted into stars, indicating that the detected outflow is potentially able to quench star-formation in the host. The momentum flux of the molecular outflow normalised to the radiative momentum output (i.e. $L_{\rm Bol}/c$) is $\lesssim1$, comparable to that of the X-ray ultra-fast outflow (UFO) detected in PDS 456. This is at odds with the expectations for an energy-conserving expansion suggested for most of the large-scale outflows detected in low-luminosity AGN so far. We suggest three possible scenarios that may explain this observation: (i) in very luminous AGN such as our target the molecular gas phase is tracing only a fraction of the total outflowing mass; (ii) a small coupling between the shocked gas by the UFO and the host-galaxy ISM (iii) AGN radiation pressure may play an important role in driving the outflow.<br />Accepted in A&A

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c88bf32815a153bf97bb3918e144159d