Dense Gas Inflow Seen Fueling Supermassive Black Hole

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

New radio telescope observations of the Circinus galaxy – one of the closest known galaxies to the Milky Way, though it has been little explored – paint a vivid picture of how molecular gas feeds the supermassive blackhole at the galaxy's heart. The findings present, for the first time, spatially resolved and robust evidence of mass accretion and feedback of an active galactic nucleus (AGN) on sub-parsec scales. Most galaxies contain a supermassive black hole (SMBH) at their center. SMBHs grow by accreting mass from the surrounding galaxy. As this material falls towards the black hole, it heats up and emits energy that can be observed as an AGN. Previous studies have shown that gas can be supplied from the interstellar medium of an entire galaxy to its central region – the area within ~100 parsecs of the core. However, little is known about how gas is delivered at the to the innermost area (et al. to study the movement of molecular, atomic, and ionized gas at the parsec-scale, which revealed an inflow of dense molecular gas in the central parsec of the AGN, feeding the SMBH at its center. According to the findings, only a small portion of this inflow – less than 3% – is consumed by the black hole. The rest is expelled by outflows of multiphase gas, providing AGN-driven feedback that may affect star formation in the host galaxy. While the processes responsible for the sub-parsec accretion described remains poorly constrained, the authors suggest that a gravitationally unstable dense gas disk could drive accretion to the central ~1 parsec.

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