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A&A 413, 949-957 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20034201
From the Circumnuclear Disk in the Galactic Center to thick, obscuring tori of AGNs
B. Vollmer1, 2, T. Beckert2 and W. J. Duschl3, 21 CDS, Observatoire astronomique de Strasbourg, UMR 7550, 11 rue de l'Université, 67000 Strasbourg, France
2 Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie, Auf dem Hügel 69, 53121 Bonn, Germany
3 Institut für Theoretische Astrophysik der Universität Heidelberg, Tiergartenstraße 15, 69121 Heidelberg, Germany
(Received 15 August 2003 / Accepted 6 October 2003 )
Abstract
We compare three different models of clumpy gas disk and show that
the Circumnuclear Disk (CND) in the Galactic Center and a putative,
geometrically thick, obscuring torus are best explained by a collisional
model consisting of quasi-stable, self-gravitating clouds. Kinetic energy
of clouds is gained by mass inflow and dissipated in cloud collisions.
The collisions give rise to a viscosity in a spatially averaged
gas dynamical picture, which connects them to angular momentum transport
and mass inflow. It is found that CND and torus share the same gas physics
in our description, where the mass of clouds is 20-50
and
their density is close to the limit of disruption by tidal shear.
We show that the difference between a transparent CND and an obscuring torus
is the gas mass and the velocity dispersion of the clouds. A change in gas
supply and the dissipation of kinetic energy can turn a torus into a
CND-like structure and vice versa.
Any massive torus will naturally lead to sufficiently high mass accretion
rates to feed a luminous AGN. For a geometrically thick torus to
obscure the view to the center even super-Eddington accretions rates
with respect to the central black hole are required.
Key words: ISM: clouds -- ISM: structure -- Galaxy: structure -- Galaxy: center -- galaxies: nuclei
Offprint request: T. Beckert, tbeckert@mpifr-bonn.mpg.de
© ESO 2004
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