Strange Universe Like a parasite sucking the life force out of its host, an international group of scientists have determined ...
Astronomers have detected a supermassive black hole starving its galaxy of gas, halting star formation in the early universe.
"The [energy released from gas falling into the] the supermassive black hole is removing large amounts of gas very fast from ...
A Milky Way-sized galaxy from the early universe appears to have stopped producing any new stars because a supermassive black hole at its center is blasting out all the material needed for stars ...
For a galaxy at its age, Pablo's Galaxy is massive. Formed during an early period in the universe's history and officially known as GS-10578, Pablo's Galaxy received its nickname from a scientist ...
"We found the culprit. The black hole is killing this galaxy and keeping it dormant by cutting off the source of 'food' the galaxy needs to form new stars." Using the James Webb Space Telescope ...
Like most large galaxies, it has a supermassive black hole at its center. However, this galaxy is essentially 'dead': it has mostly stopped forming new stars. "Based on earlier observations ...
Astronomers have observed a supermassive black hole “starving” its host galaxy to death, offering new insight into the early universe. An international team led by the University of Cambridge ...
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has spotted a gigantic black hole "starving" its host galaxy to death, astronomers say. The supermassive black hole — located nearly 12 billion light-years ...
Using JWST’s instruments, Cambridge University astrophysicist Francesco d’Eugenio and his colleagues caught a supermassive black hole red-handed, slowly starving the galaxy to death.