Surveying the Whirlpool at Arcseconds with NOEMA (SWAN). IV. Extent of active galactic nucleus feedback on the interstellar medium
Mallory D. Thorp, Antonio Usero, Frank Bigiel, Ina Galić, Smita Mathur + 17 more
TLDR
This study characterizes the spatial extent and dominant modes of AGN feedback in M51 using emission line ratios and dense molecular gas tracers.
Key contributions
- Identified AGN-dominated regions in M51 via an emission line ratio (ELR) function from VENGA spectroscopy.
- Used SWAN's 180pc resolution mapping of dense molecular gas (HCN, HNC, HCO+, N2H+) to study AGN influence.
- Found AGN-dominated regions exhibit enhanced HCN, HNC, and HCO+ emission, implying direct AGN excitation.
- Proposed a "two-stage" AGN feedback model: jet-ISM interaction spurs X-ray emission, exciting molecules like HCN.
Why it matters
This research clarifies how Active Galactic Nuclei influence their host galaxies, a key factor in galaxy evolution and star formation. By providing high-resolution mapping of AGN feedback in M51, it helps resolve conflicting observations and proposes a detailed two-stage feedback mechanism.
Original Abstract
Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) are intertwined with galaxy evolution, injecting energy into the interstellar medium (ISM) that could regulate star formation as a galaxy evolves. However, the phenomena through which we observe AGN are multiphase and multiscale, which can lead to conflicting results for how significantly AGN influence the ISM. We endeavor to characterize the spatial extent and dominant modes of AGN feedback in M51, which hosts a low-luminosity Seyfert nucleus and multi-phase outflow. We identified regions dominated by AGN ionization using an emission line ratio (ELR) function constructed from VENGA integral field spectroscopy. We then investigated how AGN feedback influences the ISM using cloud-scale mapping of dense molecular gas tracers HCN(1-0), HNC(1-0), HCO+(1-0), and N2H+(1-0) provided by SWAN. This combined dataset has a resolution of 180pc, providing a clear demarcation of where AGN feedback dominates the ISM. If we assume that N2H+ is the best tracer of dense, cold gas in SWAN, then AGN-dominated regions defined by the ELR all have greater emission in (1-0) transitions in HCN, HNC, and HCO+ than expected if they traced dense gas alone, implying excitation of these lines from the AGN. The ELR better selects these regions than molecular tracers of AGN activity like HCN/HCO+. The highest ELR values are also associated with optical and molecular shock tracers (HNCO/CO), indicating a potential dense molecular outflow in the nucleus that agrees with the heightened N2H+ emission in this limited region. All tracers of AGN activity point to a "two-stage" feedback scenario, whereby mechanical feedback from the jet-ISM interaction spurs soft X-ray emission that excites molecules such as HCN. Dense gas entrenched in a molecular outflow may also lead to a greater chemical abundance of multiple tracers measured with SWAN, but to a lesser extent than excitation from AGN feedback.
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