We report the spectroscopic detection of neutral gas inflow into a massive () quiescent galaxy observed at with JWST. From the redshifted absorption of the NaI doublet at Ang, we estimate an inflow velocity km s and a column density . We derive the inflowing mass of the gas and rate . The presence of several surrounding galaxies suggests that the galaxy may be accreting gas from nearby companions. However, we cannot confirm it with current data and the intergalactic medium or cosmic filaments are also viable sources of the inflowing gas. Despite the ongoing inflow, the galaxy remains quiescent, with an upper limit to the star formation rate of . Moreover, its star formation history suggests that the galaxy has remained quiescent during the past Gyr, with half of its stars formed by redshift . We discuss that the inflow is not massive, dense, or long-lived enough to ignite significant star formation, or it is fueling low-level AGN activity instead. This is direct evidence that quiescent galaxies can accrete cold gas after their quenching while keeping their star formation subdued. Follow-up observations with JWST and ALMA will be needed to constraint the nature of the inflowing gas.
Bevacqua, D., Marchesini, D., Saracco, P., La Barbera, F., Pan, R., Belli, S., et al. (In corso di stampa). Feeding the dead: neutral gas inflow with suppressed star formation in a long-quenched ancient massive galaxy at z~2.7 observed with JWST/NIRSpec. THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL.
Feeding the dead: neutral gas inflow with suppressed star formation in a long-quenched ancient massive galaxy at z~2.7 observed with JWST/NIRSpec
DItrani, FR;
In corso di stampa
Abstract
We report the spectroscopic detection of neutral gas inflow into a massive () quiescent galaxy observed at with JWST. From the redshifted absorption of the NaI doublet at Ang, we estimate an inflow velocity km s and a column density . We derive the inflowing mass of the gas and rate . The presence of several surrounding galaxies suggests that the galaxy may be accreting gas from nearby companions. However, we cannot confirm it with current data and the intergalactic medium or cosmic filaments are also viable sources of the inflowing gas. Despite the ongoing inflow, the galaxy remains quiescent, with an upper limit to the star formation rate of . Moreover, its star formation history suggests that the galaxy has remained quiescent during the past Gyr, with half of its stars formed by redshift . We discuss that the inflow is not massive, dense, or long-lived enough to ignite significant star formation, or it is fueling low-level AGN activity instead. This is direct evidence that quiescent galaxies can accrete cold gas after their quenching while keeping their star formation subdued. Follow-up observations with JWST and ALMA will be needed to constraint the nature of the inflowing gas.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


