AI Article Synopsis

  • - Recent research suggests that supermassive black holes may suppress star formation in massive galaxies by driving large outflows, but concrete evidence has been scarce, especially in the young universe where star formation happens quickly.
  • - Although outflows of ionized gas are commonly observed, they don’t contain enough mass to hinder star formation, with more effective gas ejection expected in neutral and molecular phases that are only seen in more extreme conditions like starbursts and quasars.
  • - New spectroscopy from the JWST reveals a massive galaxy at a redshift of 2.445 undergoing rapid star formation suppression, detecting a significant outflow of neutral gas that should effectively halt star creation, indicating that supermassive black holes can rapidly quench

Article Abstract

Large-scale outflows driven by supermassive black holes are thought to have a fundamental role in suppressing star formation in massive galaxies. However, direct observational evidence for this hypothesis is still lacking, particularly in the young universe where star-formation quenching is remarkably rapid, thus requiring effective removal of gas as opposed to slow gas heating. Although outflows of ionized gas are frequently detected in massive distant galaxies, the amount of ejected mass is too small to be able to suppress star formation. Gas ejection is expected to be more efficient in the neutral and molecular phases, but at high redshift these have only been observed in starbursts and quasars. Here we report JWST spectroscopy of a massive galaxy experiencing rapid quenching at a redshift of 2.445. We detect a weak outflow of ionized gas and a powerful outflow of neutral gas, with a mass outflow rate that is sufficient to quench the star formation. Neither X-ray nor radio activity is detected; however, the presence of a supermassive black hole is suggested by the properties of the ionized gas emission lines. We thus conclude that supermassive black holes are able to rapidly suppress star formation in massive galaxies by efficiently ejecting neutral gas.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11153157PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07412-1DOI Listing

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