Abstract

Abstract We report ALMA observations of NGC 1052 to search for mass accretion in a gas-poor active galactic nucleus. We detected CO emission representing a rotating ring-like circumnuclear disk (CND) seen edge-on with a gas mass of 5.3 × 105 M ⊙. The CND has smaller gas mass than that in typical Seyfert galaxies with circumnuclear star formation and is too gas-poor to drive mass accretion onto the central engine. The continuum emission casts molecular absorption features of CO, HCN, HCO+, SO, SO2, CS, CN, and H2O, with H13CN and HC15N and vibrationally excited (v 2 = 1) HCN and HCO+. Broader absorption line widths than CND emission-line widths imply the presence of a geometrically thick molecular torus with a radius of 2.4 ± 1.3 pc and a thickness ratio of 0.7 ± 0.3. We obtain an H2 column density of (3.3 ± 0.7) × 1025 cm−2 using H12CN, H13CN, and HCO+ absorption features and adopting abundance ratios of 12C to 13C and HCO+ to H2, and we derived a torus gas mass of (1.3 ± 0.3) × 107 M ⊙, which is ∼9% of the central black hole mass. The molecular gas in the torus is clumpy, with an estimated covering factor of . The gas density of the clumps inside the torus is inferred to be (6.4 ± 1.3) × 107 cm−3, which meets the excitation conditions for an H2O maser. The specific angular momentum in the torus exceeds the flat rotation curve extrapolated from that of the CND, indicating a Keplerian rotation inside a 14.4 pc sphere of influence.

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