Supermassive black holes show selective feeding habits during galaxy mergers

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Black holes are notorious for gobbling up everything that comes their way, but astronomers using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) have discovered that even supermassive black holes can be picky eaters, and this can have a significant impact on their growth.

This discovery, now published in The Astrophysical Journal, was made by an international team of astronomers led by Makoto A. Johnstone, a Ph.D. candidate with the University of Virginia. The team used ALMA to study seven nearby galaxy mergers hosting supermassive black holes separated by only a few thousand light-years.

How galaxy mergers affect black holes
When two massive, gas-rich galaxies merge, gravity drives vast amounts of cold molecular gas toward the centers of both systems, where supermassive black holes (SMBHs) reside. These brief, turbulent phases can light up one or both black holes as active galactic nuclei (AGN), making them some of the most energetic objects in the universe. Yet, puzzlingly, not all merging galaxies host two actively feeding black holes; some show only one, while others seem to have no appetite.

These observations revealed a dense, chaotic pile of gas clouds around many of the black holes (especially the more massive ones), meaning mergers are very effective at delivering the food for growth right to their doorsteps. Yet the current brightness of the black holes (a measure of how fast they are feeding) does not increase with the amount of gas available. Even with plenty of food nearby, most SMBHs are nibbling rather than gorging, suggesting that black hole growth during mergers could be highly inefficient, with an inconsistent digestion of gas on short timescales.

Questions about black hole feeding
“The inefficiency of the observed supermassive black hole growth, even when dense reservoirs of molecular gas are present, raises questions about the physical conditions necessary to trigger these growth episodes,” said Makoto. “In addition to occurring in extreme, dusty environments, the AGN activity is likely highly variable and episodic, explaining why it has been so difficult to detect two simultaneously active black holes in mergers.”

The team compared systems where both black holes were active (dual AGN) with mergers where only one showed obvious activity (single AGN). In some of these single AGN cases, the black hole with no appetite truly seemed starved of cold gas, but in others, the gas was observed, but the black hole still refused to eat, possibly because it was observed between feedings.

ALMA’s unique insights into galaxy evolution
“These unique ALMA observations show how black holes are actively being fed during a major galaxy merger, an event that we strongly suspect is critical in setting up the observed connection between black hole growth and galaxy evolution. It is only now, thanks to the unique and revolutionary ALMA capabilities, that this study is feasible,” says Ezequiel Treister, principal investigator of this research project, and co-author of the study.

ALMA also finds that many active black holes sit slightly off-center from their main rotating gas disks, which might be evidence of violent gravitational tussles that displace the black holes during galaxy mergers. Together, these results show that in galaxy collisions, having enough energy to feed SMBHs is only half the story; timing, turbulence, and dust decide when, and if, both black holes flare to life. https://public.nrao.edu/news/super-massive-black-holes-may-be-picky-eaters/

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