Positional Coincidence of H 2 O Maser and a Plasma‐Obscuring Torus in Radio Galaxy NGC 1052

  • Sawada‐Satoh S
  • Kameno S
  • Nakamura K
  • et al.
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Abstract

We present multifrequency simultaneous VLBA observations at 15, 22, and 43 GHz toward the nucleus of the nearby radio galaxy NGC 1052. These three continuum images reveal a dotible-sided jet structure Whose relative intensity ratios imply that the jet axis is oriented close to the sky plane. The steeply rising spectra at 15-43 GHz at the inner edges of the jets strongly suggest that synchrotron emission is absorbed by foreground thermal plasma. We detected H 2 O maser emission in the velocity range of 1550-1850 km s -1 , which is redshifted by 50-350 km s -1 . with respect to the systemic velocity of NGC 1052. The redshifted maser gas appears projected against both sides of the jet, in the same manner as the H I seen in absorption. The H 2 O maser gas is located where the free-free absorption opacity is large. This probably implies that the masers in NGC 1052 are associated with a circumnuclear torus or disk as in the nucleus of NGC 4258. Such circumnuclear structure could be the source of accretion onto the central engine. © 2008. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

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Sawada‐Satoh, S., Kameno, S., Nakamura, K., Namikawa, D., Shibata, K. M., & Inoue, M. (2008). Positional Coincidence of H 2 O Maser and a Plasma‐Obscuring Torus in Radio Galaxy NGC 1052. The Astrophysical Journal, 680(1), 191–199. https://doi.org/10.1086/587886

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