Systematic Study of the Inner Structure of Molecular Tori in Nearby U/LIRGs using Velocity Decomposition of CO Rovibrational Absorption Lines
Abstract
Determining the inner structure of the molecular torus around an active galactic nucleus is essential for understanding its formation mechanism. However, spatially resolving the torus is difficult because of its small size. To probe the clump conditions in the torus, we therefore perform the systematic velocity-decomposition analyses of the gaseous CO rovibrational absorption lines (v=0 1, J= 1) at λ 4.67 μm observed toward four (ultra)luminous infrared galaxies using the high-resolution (R 5000--10000) spectroscopy from the Subaru Telescope. We find that each transition has two to five distinct velocity components with different line-of-sight (LOS) velocities (VLOS -240--+100km\,s-1) and dispersions (σV 15--190km\,s-1); i.e., the components (a), (b), ..., beginning with the broadest one in each target, indicating that the tori have clumpy structures. By assuming a hydrostatic disk (σV Rrot-0.5), we find that the tori have dynamic inner structures, with the innermost component (a) outflowing with velocity |VLOS| 160--240km\,s-1, and the outer components (b) and (c) outflowing more slowly or infalling with |VLOS| 100km\,s-1. In addition, we find that the innermost component (a) can be attributed to collisionally excited hot ( 530K) and dense (nH2 106cm-3) clumps, based on the level populations. Conversely, the outer component (b) can be attributed to cold ( 30--140K) clumps radiatively excited by a far-infrared-to-submillimeter background with a brightness temperature higher than 20--400K. These observational results demonstrate the clumpy and dynamic structure of tori in the presence of background radiation.
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