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A&A 424, 119-124 (2004)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20041064
The unfriendly ISM in the radio galaxy 4C 12.50 (PKS 1345+12)
R. Morganti1, T. A. Oosterloo1, C. N. Tadhunter2, R. Vermeulen1, Y. M. Pihlström3, G. van Moorsel3 and K. A. Wills21 Netherlands Foundation for Research in Astronomy, Postbus 2, 7990 AA, Dwingeloo, The Netherlands
e-mail: morganti@astron.nl
2 Dep. Physics and Astronomy, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, S7 3RH, UK
3 National Radio Astronomy Observatory, Socorro, NM 87801, USA
(Received 9 April 2004 / Accepted 25 May 2004)
Abstract
The radio source 4C 12.50 has often been suggested to be a prime
candidate for the link between ultraluminous infrared galaxies and
young radio galaxies. A VLBI study of the neutral hydrogen in the
nuclear regions of this object shows that most of the gas detected
close to the systemic velocity is associated with an off-nuclear cloud
(
to 100 pc from the radio core) with a column density of
) cm
-2 and an
mass
of a few times
105 to
106
. We consider a number of
possibilities to explain the results. In particular, we discuss the
possibility that this cloud indicates the presence of a rich and
clumpy interstellar medium in the centre, likely left over from the
merger that triggered the activity and that this medium influences the
growth of the radio source. The location of the cloud - at the edge
of the northern radio jet/lobe - suggests that the radio jet might be
interacting with a gas cloud. This interaction could be responsible
for bending the young radio jet. The velocity profile of the gas is
relatively broad (
km
s
-1) and we interpret this as
kinematical evidence for interaction of the radio plasma with the
cloud. We also consider the model where the cloud is part of a
broader circumnuclear structure. Only a limited
region of this structure would have sufficient background radio brightness
and large enough column depth in neutral gas to obtain detectable
absorption against the counterjet. The VLBI study of the neutral
hydrogen in 4C 12.50 suggests that
detected near the systemic
velocity (as it is often the case in radio galaxies) may not
necessarily be connected
with a circumnuclear disk
or torus (as is very often assumed) but instead could be a tracer of
the large-scale medium that surrounds the active nucleus and that may
influence the growth of the young radio source.
Key words: galaxies: active -- galaxies: individual: 4C 12.50 -- ISM: jets and outflow -- radio lines: galaxies
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