Cold, clumpy accretion onto an active supermassive black hole
Grant R. Tremblay, J. B. Raymond Oonk, Fran\c{c}oise Combes, Philippe, Salom\'e, Christopher P. O'Dea, Stefi A. Baum, G. Mark Voit, Megan Donahue,, Brian R. McNamara, Timothy A. Davis, Michael A. McDonald, Alastair C. Edge,, Tracy E. Clarke, Roberto Galv\'an-Madrid

TL;DR
This study provides observational evidence of cold, clumpy molecular clouds fueling accretion onto a supermassive black hole, challenging the traditional hot gas inflow model and supporting theories of stochastic, cold accretion.
Contribution
First direct observation of cold, clumpy gas clouds actively accreting onto a supermassive black hole in a galaxy core.
Findings
Cold clouds are falling inward at about 300 km/s.
The clouds are within the innermost hundred parsecs of the black hole.
Cold accretion supports stochastic, cold mode models over hot, smooth inflow models.
Abstract
Supermassive black holes in galaxy centres can grow by the accretion of gas, liberating energy that might regulate star formation on galaxy-wide scales. The nature of the gaseous fuel reservoirs that power black hole growth is nevertheless largely unconstrained by observations, and is instead routinely simplified as a smooth, spherical inflow of very hot gas. Recent theory and simulations instead predict that accretion can be dominated by a stochastic, clumpy distribution of very cold molecular clouds - a departure from the "hot mode" accretion model - although unambiguous observational support for this prediction remains elusive. Here we report observations that reveal a cold, clumpy accretion flow towards a supermassive black hole fuel reservoir in the nucleus of the Abell 2597 Brightest Cluster Galaxy (BCG), a nearby (redshift z=0.0821) giant elliptical galaxy surrounded by a dense…
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