Obscuring and Feeding Supermassive Black Holes with Evolving Nuclear Star Clusters
Abstract
Recently, high-resolution observations made with the help of the near-infrared adaptive optics integral field spectrograph SINFONI at the VLT proved the existence of massive and young nuclear star clusters in the centers of a sample of Seyfert galaxies. With the help of high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations with the pluto code, we follow the evolution of such clusters, especially focusing on mass and energy feedback from young stars. This leads to a filamentary inflow of gas on large scales (tens of parsecs), whereas a turbulent and very dense disk builds up on the parsec scale. Here we concentrate on the long-term evolution of the nuclear disk in NGC 1068 with the help of an effective viscous disk model, using the mass input from the large-scale simulations and accounting for star formation in the disk. This two-stage modeling enables us to connect the tens-of-parsecs scale region (observable with SINFONI) with the parsec-scale environment (MIDI observations). At the current age of the nuclear star cluster, our simulations predict disk sizes of the order 0.8 to 0.9 pc, gas masses of order 106 M⊙, and mass transfer rates through the inner boundary of order 0.025 M⊙ yr-1, in good agreement with values derived from observations.
- Publication:
-
Co-Evolution of Central Black Holes and Galaxies
- Pub Date:
- May 2010
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:0911.5641
- Bibcode:
- 2010IAUS..267..307S
- Keywords:
-
- galaxies: Seyfert;
- galaxies: nuclei;
- galaxies: ISM;
- galaxies: individual (NGC 1068);
- hydrodynamics;
- methods: numerical;
- ISM: evolution;
- ISM: kinematics and dynamics;
- black hole physics;
- stars: mass loss;
- Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
- E-Print:
- 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the IAU General Assembly 2009, Rio de Janeiro, S267 Co-evolution of Central Black Holes and Galaxies