Breaking 21:45 Middle East conflict sends oil prices soaring nearly 30% in a week 21:16 Oracle and OpenAI halt Texas AI data center expansion plan 20:45 Brent oil could reach $120 if Middle East tensions continue, Barclays warns 20:15 White House downplays reports of Russian intelligence support to Iran 16:30 US agency to host forum on autonomous vehicle safety with Top CEOs 16:20 US submarine sinks Iranian frigate near Sri Lanka as regional tensions escalate 15:20 EU says United States will honor Turnberry trade deal despite tariff dispute 14:45 US dollar pares gains after February payrolls fall short of expectations 14:20 Iranian AI disinformation campaign escalates during conflict 13:50 Global investors shift toward international stocks as BofA predicts new market order 13:20 Dozens of French ships stranded as Strait of Hormuz crisis deepens 12:50 European stocks rise as oil eases after strongest weekly surge since 2022 12:20 FIFA reviews World Cup security with Mexico after cartel violence 09:50 Asian markets mixed as Iran conflict enters seventh day 09:20 Jimmy Lai drops appeal against 20 year prison sentence in Hong Kong 08:50 Physicists create first computer model of long theorized ideal glass 08:20 Euro risks falling below parity with dollar if Iran war drags on 07:50 SoftBank seeks record $40 billion loan to expand investment in OpenAI 07:20 Microsoft unveils Project Helix, next generation Xbox with PC gaming support 07:00 Amazon restores service after six hour shopping outage linked to software error

Ancient galaxy slowly starved by its black hole

Monday 12 January 2026 - 15:50
By: Dakir Madiha
Ancient galaxy slowly starved by its black hole

Astronomers have uncovered one of the universe's earliest "dead" galaxies, where a supermassive black hole at its core halted star formation not through a dramatic outburst but via repeated cycles of gas heating and ejection a process likened to death by a thousand cuts.

The study, published on January 11 in Nature Astronomy, drew on observations from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) to analyze a galaxy labeled GS-10578, affectionately known as "Pablo's galaxy" after the astronomer who first studied it in detail. This massive galaxy existed roughly three billion years after the Big Bang, boasting a stellar mass equivalent to about 200 billion suns an impressive scale for such an early epoch. Most of its stars formed between 12.5 and 11.5 billion years ago, yet star formation ceased around 400 million years ago, despite ample raw material remaining.

Researchers from the University of Cambridge led the effort, dedicating nearly seven hours of ALMA time to hunt for carbon monoxide, a tracer of the cold hydrogen gas crucial for birthing new stars. They detected almost none. "The surprise was in the absence," said co-lead author Dr. Jan Scholtz from Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory and Kavli Institute for Cosmology. "Even with one of ALMA's deepest observations for this galaxy type, cold gas was virtually gone, pointing to a gradual starvation rather than a single catastrophic blow."

JWST spectroscopy exposed powerful outflows of neutral gas from the central black hole, racing outward at 400 kilometers per second and expelling material equivalent to 60 solar masses annually. At that pace, the galaxy's remaining fuel would deplete in just 16 to 220 million years far quicker than the typical billion-year timeline for similar systems. "The galaxy appears as a serene rotating disk," noted co-lead author Dr. Francesco D'Eugenio from the Kavli Institute. "No major disruptive merger is evident, yet star formation stopped 400 million years ago while the black hole reactivated."

These findings shed light on the surprisingly abundant massive, mature-looking galaxies that JWST has revealed in the early universe objects previously undetected. "Before JWST, we didn't know they existed in such numbers," Scholtz added. "This quenching mechanism explains how they burn bright but fade fast." The Cambridge team has secured an extra 6.5 hours of JWST time to probe warmer hydrogen gas, potentially unveiling more about how black holes enforce stellar silence.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.