ALMA Observations of Warm Molecular Gas and Cold Dust in NGC 34

Abstract

We present ALMA Cycle-0 observations of the CO (6-5) line emission (rest-frame frequency = 691.473 GHz) and of the 435μ m dust continuum emission in the nuclear region of NGC 34, a local luminous infrared galaxy (LIRG) at a distance of 84 Mpc (1" = 407 pc) which contains a Seyfert 2 active galactic nucleus (AGN) and a nuclear starburst. The CO emission is well resolved by the ALMA beam ( 0."26× 0."23), with an integrated flux of fCO~(6-5) = 1004\; ( 151) \; Jy\; km\; s-1. Both the morphology and kinematics of the CO (6-5) emission are rather regular, consistent with a compact rotating disk with a size of 200 pc. A significant emission feature is detected on the red-shifted wing of the line profile at the frequency of the H13CN\; (8-7) line, with an integrated flux of 17.7 2.1 (random) 2.7 (sysmatic)\; Jy\;km\; s-1. However, it cannot be ruled out that the feature is due to an outflow of warm dense gas with a mean velocity of 400\; km\; s-1. The continuum is resolved into an elongated configuration, and the observed flux corresponds to a dust mass of Mdust = 106.97 0.13\; Msun. An unresolved central core ( radius 50\; pc) contributes 28\% of the continuum flux and 19\% of the CO (6-5) flux, consistent with insignificant contributions of the AGN to both emissions. Both the CO (6-5) and continuum spatial distributions suggest a very high gas column density ( >= 104\; Msun\; pc-2) in the nuclear region at radius <= 100\; pc.

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