Massive accretion disks
- Creators
-
Scoville, N. Z.
Abstract
Recent high resolution near infrared (HST-NICMOS) and mm-interferometric imaging have revealed dense gas and dust accretion disks in nearby ultra-luminous galactic nuclei. In the best studied ultraluminousIR galaxy, Arp 220, the 2μm imaging shows dust disks in both of the merging galactic nuclei and mm-CO line imaging indicates molecular gasmasses ∼ 10⁹M⊙ for each disk. The two gas disks in Arp 220 are counterrotating and their dynamical masses are ∼ 2×10⁹ M⊙, that is, only slightly largerthan the gas masses. These disks have radii ∼100 pc and thickness 10-50 pc. The high brightness temperatures of the CO lines indicatethat the gas in the disks has area filling factors ∼25-50% and mean densitiesof ≥ 10⁴ cm⁻³. Within these nuclear disks, the rate of massive star formation is undoubtedly prodigious and, given the high viscosity of the gas, there will also be high radial accretion rates, perhaps ≥ 10 M⊙ yr ⁻¹. If this inflow persists to very small radii, it is enough to feed even the highest luminosity AGNs.
Additional Information
© 1999 Kluwer Academic Publishers. It is a pleasure to acknowledge stimulating discussions with A. Baker, C. Norman and K. Sakamoto on this work and assistance with the manuscript from N. Candelin and Z. Turgel.Attached Files
Submitted - 9903273.pdf
Files
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:e50b5fef7a512cc3e1375df65c11c27d
|
180.9 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 103147
- DOI
- 10.1023/a:1002662001277
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20200512-132628581
- Created
-
2020-05-12Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
-
2021-11-16Created from EPrint's last_modified field