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Home»Science»How do you activate a supermassive black hole? A galaxy merger should do the trick
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How do you activate a supermassive black hole? A galaxy merger should do the trick

adminBy adminDecember 11, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read0 Views
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How do you activate a supermassive black hole? A galaxy merger should do the trick
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Scientists have confirmed that colossal collisions between galaxies trigger titanic eruptions in the centers of those galaxies, and the discovery is thanks to an artificial intelligence tool that was able to sort through images of a million galaxies to find those possessing a so-called active galactic nucleus, or AGN.

The results come courtesy of the Euclid space telescope, which is a European Space Agency mission that’s designed to study dark matter and dark energy by measuring and mapping billions of galaxies. Researchers took a “small” subset of a million of the galaxies Euclid is charting and used them to chronicle the causes of AGN.

An AGN describes a supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy that suddenly begins consuming vast amounts of material. That material cannot all fit into the black hole‘s maw all at once, so it waits its turn in an accretion disk circling around the black hole. Think of it as a logjam of gas, and as more and more gas piles up, the density rises and the temperature increases, causing the disk to shine brilliantly. Furthermore, powerful magnetic fields can whip away some of the charged particles within the disk and spit them out in beams moving at almost the speed of light. When we see an AGN with beams coming towards us we call it a quasar or, for the most powerful that are pointed directly at us, a blazar.


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It has long been strongly suspected that mergers play a crucial role in sparking AGN activity, because something needs to push all that gas into the nucleus of a galaxy, but suspecting and having confirmation are two different things. Validating this hasn’t been as easy as one might think, because the most powerful AGN are at a great distance from us (the closest quasar is 3C273, which is 2.3 billion light-years away) and clearly resolving galaxies at such distances so that we can see that they are definitely merging has been difficult. While the Hubble Space Telescope and James Webb Space Telescope can resolve them, they don’t cover a wide enough area of sky to be able to image enough to obtain a census.

Following its launch in 2023, Euclid has changed all that. With its 1.2-meter telescopic mirror, 600 megapixel camera and wide field of vision, in just one week it can provide higher quality images than most other telescopes while covering an area of sky similar to the total area that has been observed by the Hubble Space Telescope during its entire 35 years in service.

Astronomers in the Euclid Collaboration divided the million galaxies seen by Euclid into two categories: one where the galaxies appear to be merging, and one where no merger is taking place.

They then employed an artificial intelligence image decomposition tool developed by Berta Margalef-Bentabol and Lingyu Wang from SRON, the Netherlands Institute for Space Research, to identify AGN in these galaxies and even quantify their power output to determine which are the most energetic.

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“This new approach can even reveal faint AGN that other identification methods will miss,” said Margalef-Bentabol in a statement.

The team found that there were between two and six times as many AGN in galaxies in the category of mergers than those not experiencing a merger.

In the case of mergers that have begun relatively recently and which have kicked up a lot of interstellar dust such that it shrouds the nucleus, making it only visible in infrared light, there are six times more AGN. In the case of mergers that are nearing their end stages and in which the dust has all settled, there are still twice as many AGN than in the non-merger galaxies.


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“The difference between the two AGN types could mean that many AGN found in non-mergers are actually in merged galaxies that have completed the chaotic stages and appear as a single galaxy in a regular form,” said Antonio la Marca of the University of Groningen.

The observational evidence not only heavily supports the concept of mergers being a trigger of AGN activity, but also indicates that mergers are the primary cause, particularly for the most luminous AGN.

“We also conclude that mergers are very likely to be the only mechanism capable of feeding the most luminous AGN,” said la Marca. “At the very least they are the primary trigger.”

AGN represent the most rapid growth phase of supermassive black holes, and the outpouring of radiation from these gluttonous black holes can heat the molecular gas in a galaxy, preventing it from forming stars. AGN can therefore have a long-term impact on their host galaxy, and understanding that the host is likely to be merging is important to know when modeling the evolution of galaxies.

The findings are set to be published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, and are available as two pre-prints, one detailing the analysis of merging galaxies and AGN, and the other describing the AI image decomposition tool.



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