
âDeath by a thousand cutsâ: Young galaxy ran out of fuel as black hole choked off supplies
Astronomers have spotted one of the oldest âdeadâ galaxies yet identified, and found that a growing supermassive black hole can slowly starve a galaxy rather than tear it apart. The researchers, led by the University of Cambridge, used data from the James Webb Space Telescope and the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA), to study a galaxy in the early universe - about three billion years after the Big Bang. The galaxy, called GS-10578 but nicknamed âPabloâs Galaxyâ after the astronomer who first observed it in detail, is massive for such an early period in the universe: about 200 billion times the mass of our Sun, and most of its stars formed between 12.5 and 11.5 billion years ago. Pabloâs Galaxy appears to have âlived fast and died youngâ: it stopped forming new stars, despite its relatively young age, due to an almost total absence of the cold gas stars need to form. The supermassive black hole at the galaxyâs centre appears to be the culprit. But instead of a single cataclysmic event, the galaxy suffered âdeath by a thousand cutsâ as the black hole repeatedly heated the gas in and around the galaxy, preventing it from resupplying the galaxy with fresh gas and slowly strangling star formation. The results are reported in the journal Nature Astronomy . The researchers spent nearly seven hours observing the galaxy with ALMA, hoping to detect carbon monoxide - a tracer of cold hydrogen gas. Instead, they found nothing. âWhat surprised us was how much you can learn by not seeing something,â said co-first author Dr Jan Scholtz from Cambridgeâs Cavendish Laboratory and Kavli Institute for Cosmology. âEven with one of ALMAâs deepest observations of this kind of galaxy, there was essentially no cold gas left. It points to a slow starvation rather than a single dramatic death blow.â Meanwhile, JWST spectroscopy revealed powerful winds of neutral gas streaming out of the galaxyâs supermassive black hole at 400 kilometres per second, removing 60 solar masses of gas every year. Those numbers suggest the galaxyâs remaining fuel was depleted in as little as 16 to 220 million years - far faster than the billion-year timescale typical for similar galaxies. âThe galaxy looks like a calm, rotating disc,â said co-first author Dr Francesco DâEugenio, who is also affiliated with the Kavli Institute for Cosmology. âThat tells us it didnât suffer a major, disruptive merger with another galaxy. Yet it stopped forming stars 400 million years ago, while the black hole is yet again active. So the current black hole activity and the outburst of gas we observed didnât cause the shutdown; instead, repeated episodes likely kept the fuel from coming back.â By reconstructing the galaxyâs star-formation history, the researchers concluded that the galaxy evolved with net-zero inflow - meaning fresh gas never refilled its tank. Rather than blowing away all its gas in one go, the black hole seems to have heated or expelled incoming material over multiple cycles, preventing the galaxy from replenishing itself. âYou donât...
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