Bibcode
DOI
Arribas, S.; Colina, L.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 514, Issue 2, pp. 637-647.
Advertised on:
4
1999
Journal
Citations
34
Refereed citations
26
Description
Two-dimensional spectroscopy of the low-redshift active galaxy NGC 4303
obtained with the Two-Dimensional Fiber ISIS System is presented. The
ionization structure and velocity field of the nuclear region of this
galaxy, where a compact UV-bright spiral structure connected with the
UV-bright core has been detected with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST;
Colina et al. 1997a), are investigated in detail. The ionized gas shows
a structure similar to that observed in the high spatial resolution HST
UV-continuum image. The Hβ and Hα emission is dominated by
the nuclear star-forming regions, while the core of the galaxy is the
brightest region in the [O III] lambda5007 and [N II] lambda6584
emission lines. The optical emission line ratios of the nuclear
star-forming regions are characteristic of young (ages 2-3 Myr)
star-forming regions, while the core of the galaxy shows the
emission-line ratios of a low-luminosity AGN in between an [O I]-weak
LINER and a low-excitation Seyfert 2. The nature of the ionizing source
located at the core of the galaxy is still unsolved. Its luminosity and
optical emission line ratios are compatible with the presence of a young
(~3.5 Myr) massive (~8x10^4 M_solar) cluster of stars, but are also
consistent with the existence of a power-law nonthermal ionizing source.
Whatever the nature of this ionizing source, the nuclear star-forming
spiral dominates the ionizing radiation, contributing about 90% of the
total ionizing flux. The velocity field of the ionized gas, as measured
by the Hβ emission line, is consistent with that of a massive
rotating disk characterized by a radius of 300 pc, a rotation velocity
of 85 km s^-1, an inclination of 45 deg with respect to the line of
sight, and a kinematic major axis oriented along P.A. 130 deg. The
inferred dynamical mass inside a radius of 300 pc is 5.0x10^8 M_solar.
The mass and size of this nuclear rotating disk is similar to those
recently detected in ultraluminous infrared galaxies like Mrk 231 and
Arp 220. The observed line profiles of the high-excitation [O
III]-emitting gas show the presence of two kinematically distinct
gaseous components. The main component follows the velocity pattern of
the massive rotating disk. The secondary component has an amplitude of
+/-350 km s^-1, and a minor axis oriented, in projection, almost
perpendicular to the minor axis of the low-ionization gas. This second[O
III] velocity component could represent gas located in a nuclear
ionizing cone, i.e., gas flowing outward outside the plane of the
low-excitation gas disk, and being ionized by the UV-bright source
located at the core of the galaxy. The proximity of NGC 4303 together
with the detection of (1) an AGN-like nucleus, (2) a compact nuclear
star-forming spiral structure connected to the nucleus, (3) a massive
rotating nuclear disk, and (4) radially flowing high-excitation gas
makes this galaxy an ideal candidate for the study of the fueling of
active galaxies and the starburst-AGN connection.