Excitation of Molecular Hydrogen in Seyferts: NGC 5506 and NGC 3081

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 993:2 (2025) 217

Authors:

Daniel E Delaney, Erin KS Hicks, Lulu Zhang, Chris Packham, Ric Davies, Miguel Pereira Santaella, Enrica Bellocchi, Nancy A Levenson, Steph Campbell, David J Rosario, Houda Haidar, Cristina Ramos Almeida, Anelise Audibert, Claudio Ricci, Laura Hermosa Mu帽oz, Francoise Combes, Almudena Alonso-Herrero, Santiago Garc铆a-Burillo, Federico Esposito, Ismael Garc铆a-Bernete, Taro Shimizu, Martin Ward, Omaira Gonzalez Martin, Alvaro Labiano, Dimitra Rigopoulou

Abstract:

We utilize James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Mid Infrared Instrument (MIRI) integral field unit observations to investigate the behavior and excitation of H2 in the nearby Seyfert galaxies NGC 3081 and NGC 5506, both part of the Galactic Activity, Torus, and Outflow Survey (or GATOS). We compare population levels of the S(1) to S(8) rotational H2 emission lines visible to JWST/MIRI spectroscopy to models assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE), in order to estimate the column density and thermal scaling of the molecular gas. For the nuclear regions, we incorporate Very Large Telescope Spectrograph for INtegral Field Observations in the Near Infrared (or VLT/SINFONI) K-band observations to estimate population levels for available rovibrational H2 emission lines, and compare the resultant population curves to non-LTE radiative transfer models and shock modeling. We report a differing set of prominent active galactic nuclei (AGN)-driven excitation mechanisms between the two galaxies. For NGC 3081, we find that a non-LTE radiative transfer environment is adequate to explain observations of the nuclear region, indicating that the primary mode in which the AGN transfers excitation energy is likely irradiation. We estimate the extent of AGN photoionization along the ionization bicone to be 鈮330 pc. In contrast, for NGC 5506, we find a shock scenario to be a more plausible excitation mechanism, a conclusion bolstered by an observed spatial correlation between higher-energy rotational H2 and [Fe II]5.34渭m emission. In addition, we identify potential nuclear H2 outflows resulting from an interaction between the ionization bicone and the rotational disk. By isolating the outflowing component of the H2 emission, we estimate the warm molecular mass outflow rate to be 0.07 M鈯 yr鈭1.

Creating halos with autoregressive multistage networks

Physical Review D American Physical Society 112:10 (2025) 103503

Authors:

Shivam Pandey, Chirag Modi, Benjamin D Wandelt, Deaglan J Bartlett, Adrian E Bayer, Greg L Bryan, Matthew Ho, Guilhem Lavaux, T Lucas Makinen, Francisco Villaescusa-Navarro

Abstract:

To maximize the amount of information extracted from cosmological datasets, simulations that accurately represent these observations are necessary. However, traditional simulations that evolve particles under gravity by estimating particle-particle interactions (饾憗-body simulations) are computationally expensive and prohibitive to scale to the large volumes and resolutions necessary for the upcoming datasets. Moreover, modeling the distribution of galaxies typically involves identifying virialized dark matter halos, which is also a time- and memory-consuming process for large聽饾憗-body simulations, further exacerbating the computational cost. In this study, we introduce聽CHARM, a novel method for creating mock halo catalogs by matching the spatial, mass, and velocity statistics of halos directly from the large-scale distribution of the dark matter density field. We develop multistage neural spline flow-based networks to learn this mapping at redshift聽饾懅聽=0.5聽directly with computationally cheaper low-resolution particle mesh simulations instead of relying on the high-resolution聽饾憗-body simulations. We show that the mock halo catalogs and painted galaxy catalogs have the same statistical properties as obtained from聽饾憗-body simulations in both real space and redshift space. Finally, we use these mock catalogs for cosmological inference using redshift-space galaxy power spectrum, bispectrum, and wavelet-based statistics using simulation-based inference, performing the first inference with accelerated forward model simulations and finding unbiased cosmological constraints with well-calibrated posteriors.

The GECKOS Survey: revealing the formation history of a barred galaxy via structural decomposition and resolved spectroscopy

(2025)

Authors:

A Fraser-McKelvie, DA Gadotti, F Fragkoudi, C de S脙隆-Freitas, M Martig, M Bureau, T Davis, R Elliott, E Emsellem, D Fisher, MR Hayden, J van de Sande, AB Watts

The Galaxy Activity, Torus, and Outflow Survey (GATOS). X. Molecular gas clumpiness under the influence of AGN

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences (2025)

Authors:

Federico Esposito, Almudena Alonso-Herrero, Santiago Garc铆a-Burillo, Ismael Garc铆a-Bernete, Fran莽oise Combes, Richard Davies, Enrique Lopez-Rodriguez, Omaira Gonz谩lez-Mart铆n, Cristina Ramos Almeida, Anelise Audibert, KS Erin Hicks, Miguel Querejeta, Claudio Ricci, Enrica Bellocchi, Peter Boorman, J Andrew Bunker, Steph Campbell, E Daniel Delaney, Tanio D铆az-Santos, Donaji Esparza-Arredondo, Sebastian H枚nig, 脕lvaro Labiano Ortega, A Nancy Levenson, Chris Packham, Miguel Pereira-Santaella, A Rogemar Riffel, Dimitra Rigopoulou, J David Rosario, Antonio Usero, Lulu Zhang

Abstract:

The distribution of molecular gas on small scales regulates star formation and the growth of supermassive black holes in galaxy centers. Yet, the role of active galactic nuclei (AGN) feedback in shaping this distribution remains poorly constrained. We investigate how AGNs influence the small-scale structure of molecular gas in galaxy centers by measuring the clumpiness of CO($3-2$) emission observed with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in the nuclear regions ($50-200$ pc from the AGNs) of 16 nearby Seyfert galaxies from the Galaxy Activity, Torus, and Outflow Survey (GATOS). To quantify clumpiness we applied three different methods: (1) the median of the pixel-by-pixel contrast between the original and smoothed maps; (2) the ratio of the total excess flux to the total flux, after subtracting the background smoothed emission; and (3) the fraction of total flux coming from clumpy regions, interpreted as the mass fraction in clumps. We find a negative correlation between molecular gas clumpiness and AGN X-ray luminosity (L_ X ), suggesting that higher AGN activity is associated with smoother gas distributions. All methods reveal a turnover in this relation around L_ X erg s^-1, possibly indicating a threshold above which AGN feedback becomes efficient at dispersing dense molecular structures and suppressing future star formation. Our findings provide new observational evidence that AGN feedback can smooth out dense gas structures in galaxy centers.

Warped Disk Galaxies. II. From the Cosmic Web to the Galactic Warp

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 993:2 (2025) 205

Authors:

Woong-Bae G Zee, S Lyla Jung, Sanjaya Paudel, Suk-Jin Yoon

Abstract:

Galactic warps are common in disk galaxies. While often attributed to galaxy鈥揼alaxy tides, a nonspherical dark matter halo has also been proposed as a driver of disk warping. We investigate links among warp morphology, satellite distribution, and large-scale structure using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey catalog of warped disks compiled by W.-B. G. Zee et al. Warps are classified into 244 S- and 127 U-types, hosting 1373 and 740 satellites, respectively, and are compared to an unwarped control matched in stellar mass, redshift, and local density. As an indirect, population-level proxy for the host halo鈥檚 shape and orientation, we analyze the stacked spatial distribution of satellites. Warped hosts show a significant anisotropy: an excess at 45掳 < 蠒 < 90掳 (measured from the host major axis), peaking at P(蠒) 鈮 0.003, versus nearly isotropic controls. Satellites of S-type warps preferentially align with the nearest cosmic filament, whereas those of U-type warps are more often perpendicular. The incidence of warps increases toward filaments (rfila < 4 Mpc h鈭1), while the number of satellites around warped hosts remains approximately constant with filament distance, indicating a direct influence of the large-scale environment. We discuss possible links between galactic warps and the cosmic web, including anisotropic tidal fields and differences in evolutionary stage.