AI Article Synopsis

  • Almost all massive galaxies have supermassive black holes (BHs) at their centers, which influence galaxy behavior, particularly star formation.
  • Recent studies indicate that the relationship between BH activity and star formation is complex, with some galaxies showing no decrease in gas or star formation despite having active BHs.
  • Research analysis reveals a strong correlation between the mass of atomic hydrogen (HI) gas and BH mass, suggesting that BHs play a key role in regulating galaxy gas content and potentially affecting star formation.

Article Abstract

The nucleus of almost all massive galaxies contains a supermassive black hole (BH). The feedback from the accretion of these BHs is often considered to have crucial roles in establishing the quiescence of massive galaxies, although some recent studies show that even galaxies hosting the most active BHs do not exhibit a reduction in their molecular gas reservoirs or star formation rates. Therefore, the influence of BHs on galaxy star formation remains highly debated and lacks direct evidence. Here, based on a large sample of nearby galaxies with measurements of masses of both BHs and atomic hydrogen (HI), the main component of the interstellar medium, we show that the HI gas mass to stellar masses ratio (μ = M/M) is more strongly correlated with BH masses (M) than with any other galaxy parameters, including stellar mass, stellar mass surface density and bulge masses. Moreover, once the μ-M correlation is considered, μ loses dependence on other galactic parameters, demonstrating that M serves as the primary driver of μ. These findings provide important evidence for how the accumulated energy from BH accretion regulates the cool gas content in galaxies, by ejecting interstellar medium gas and/or suppressing gas cooling from the circumgalactic medium.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11357995PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07821-2DOI Listing

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