Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of the Circinus Galaxy

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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With 12 figures, to be published in the Astronomical Journal, September 2000 issue

Scientific paper

10.1086/301532

We present an HST imaging study of the nearby (4 Mpc distant) Circinus galaxy, which contains the nearest type 2 Seyfert nucleus and prominent circumnuclear star formation. Images have been obtained in the [OIII]$\lambda$5007, H$\alpha$ and H$_2$ v=1--0 S(1) emission lines, and in the green (5470 \AA), red (8140 \AA) and near infrared (2.04 and 2.15 $\mu$m) continua. An image in the [Fe II] $\lambda$1.644 $\mu$m line has been taken with a ground-based telescope. The [OIII] and H$\alpha$ images reveal the detailed structure of the complex of streamers and knots of high-excitation gas, which extends out of the galaxy disk. The morphology some 250 pc from the nucleus strongly suggests that the high-excitation gas is concentrated on the surface of a hollow cone with apex close to the nucleus. Such a structure may result through entrainment of dense gas from a circumnuclear torus in the galaxy disk by a low density, outflowing wind or jet. Within 40 pc of the nucleus, the high-excitation gas takes the form of a striking, filled V-shaped structure extending in the same direction as the larger scale high-excitation emission. This `V' can be described as an ionization cone, though a matter-bounded structure is also possible. The implied collimation of the ionizing photons or gaseous outflow must occur within 2 pc of the apex of the cone, presumed to be the location of the nucleus. The H$\alpha$ image shows a complex structure of HII regions, including the well known starburst ring of radius 150 - 270 pc. In addition, there is a more compact (40 pc radius), elliptical ring of HII regions around the `ionization cone'. We argue that this latter ring, which we call the nuclear ring, is intrinsically circular and located in the plane of the galaxy disk. Abstract truncated.

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