ALMA deepen mystery about the relation between supermassive black holes and their host galaxies
ALMA OBSERVATORY/DICYT Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) to observe an active galaxy with a strong ionized gas outflow from the galactic center, astronomers have obtained a result making astronomers even more puzzled: an unambiguous detection of carbon monoxide (CO) gas associated with the galactic disk. However, they have also found that the CO gas which settles in the galaxy is not affected by the strong ionized gas outflow launched from the galactic center.
According to a popular scenario explaining the formation and evolution of galaxies and supermassive black holes, radiation from galactic centers, where supermassive black holes are, can significantly influence the molecular gas (such as CO) and the star formation activities of the galaxies.
ALMA result shows that the ionized gas outflow driven by the supermassive black hole does not necessarily affect its host galaxy. This result “has made the co-evolution of galaxies and supermassive black holes more puzzling,” explains Dr. Yoshiki Toba from the Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics (ASIAA, Taiwan), and main author of this research. “The next step is looking into more data of this kind of galaxies. That is crucial for understanding the full picture of the formation and evolution of galaxies and supermassive black holes”.
Answering the question “How did galaxies form and evolve during the 13.8-billion-year history of the universe?” has been one top issue in modern astronomy. Studies already revealed that almost all massive galaxies harbor a supermassive black hole at their centers. In recent findings, studies further showed the tight correlation between the mass of black holes and those of their host galaxies. This correlation suggests that supermassive black holes and their host galaxies have evolved together and they closely interacted each other as they grew, as known as the co-evolution of galaxies and supermassive black holes.
The gas outflow driven by a supermassive black hole at the galactic center recently has become the focus of attention as it possibly is playing a key role in the co-evolution of galaxies and black holes. A widely accepted idea has described this phenomenon as the intense radiation from the galactic center in which is the supermassive black hole ionizes the surrounding gas, even affecting the molecular gas that is the ingredient of star formation. The strong radiation activates or suppresses the star formation of galaxies. However, “we astronomers do not understand the real relation between the activity of supermassive black holes and star formation in galaxies,” says Tohru Nagao, Professor at Ehime University. “Therefore, many astronomers including us are eager to observe the real scene of the interaction between the nuclear outflow and the star-forming activities, for revealing the mystery of the co-evolution.”
Astronomers believe that DOGs harbor actively growing supermassive black holes in their nuclei. In particular, one DOG (WISE1029+0501, hereafter WISE1029) is outflowing gas ionized by the intense radiation from its supermassive black hole. WISE1029 is known as an extreme case concerning ionized gas outflow, and this particular factor has motivated the researchers to see what happens to its molecular gas.
By making use of ALMA’s outstanding sensitivity which is excellent in investigating properties of molecular gas and star-forming activities in galaxies, the team conducted their research by observing the CO and the cold dust of galaxy WISE1029 (Figure 2). After detailed analysis, surprisingly they found, there is no sign of significant molecular gas outflow. Furthermore, star-forming activity is neither activated nor suppressed. This indicates that a strong ionized gas outflow launched from the supermassive black hole in WISE1029 neither significantly affect the surrounding molecular gas nor the star formation.
There have been many reports saying that the ionized gas outflow driven by the accretion power of a supermassive black hole has an enormous impact on surrounding molecular gas (e.g., *2,3). However, it is a rare case that there is no close interaction between ionized and molecular gas as the researchers are reporting this time. Yoshiki and its team’s result suggests that the radiation from a supermassive black hole does not always affect the molecular gas and star formation of its host galaxy.
While their result is making the co-evolution of galaxies and supermassive black holes more puzzling, Yoshiki and his team are exciting about revealing the full picture of the scenario. He says that “understanding such co-evolution is crucial for astronomy. By collecting statistical data of this kind of galaxies and continuing in more follow-up observations using ALMA, we hope to reveal the truth.”