4.7 Article

Infrared Emission from Cold Gas Dusty Disks in Massive Ellipticals

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 901, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/abacc0

Keywords

black hole physics; Elliptical galaxies; E plus A galaxies; Galaxy evolution; Interstellar medium; Interstellar dust; Metallicity; Dust continuum emission

Funding

  1. Center for Computational Astrophysics
  2. Princeton University
  3. NIH Research Facility Improvement grant [1G20RR030893-01]
  4. New York State Empire State Development, Division of Science Technology and Innovation (NYSTAR) [C090171]

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What is the expected infrared output of elliptical galaxies? We report the latest findings obtained in this high time resolution (similar to 10 yr) and high spatial resolution (2.5 pc at center) study. We add a set of grain physics to the Massive active galactic nucleus (AGN) Controlled Ellipticals Resolved code, including (a) dust grains made in passive stellar evolution; (b) dust grain growth due to collision and sticking; (c) grain destruction due to thermal sputtering; (d) dust cooling of hot gas via inelastic collisions; and (e) radiation pressure on dust grains. The code improvements enable us to analyze metal depletion and AGN obscuration due to dust, and to assess its infrared output. We simulate a representative massive elliptical galaxy of a central stellar velocity dispersion similar to 260 km s(-1) and modest rotation. We find that: (1) the circumnuclear disk (similar to 1 kpc in diameter) is dusty in its outer region where most of the metals are contained in dust grains, while in the inner disk, dust grains are mostly destroyed by the AGN irradiation; (2) the dusty disk is optically thick to both the starlight within the disk and the radiation from the central AGN; thus the AGN is obscured behind the disk, and the covering factor is similar to 0.2; and (3) the duty cycles of the AGN activities, star formation, and the dust infrared luminosity roughly match observations; e.g., in most of its lifetime, the simulated galaxy is a stereotypical quiescent elliptical galaxy with LIR similar to 10 L.11, but it can reach greater than or similar to 10(46) erg s(-1) during outbursts with a star formation rate greater than or similar to 250 M-circle dot yr(-1).

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