Jet-driven AGN feedback on molecular gas and low star-formation efficiency in a massive local spiral galaxy with bright X-ray halo
N. P. H. Nesvadba, A. Y. Wagner, D. Mukherjee, A. Mandal, R. M. J., Janssen, H. Zovaro, N. Neumayer, J. Bagchi, G. Bicknell

TL;DR
This study shows that jet-driven AGN feedback in a massive spiral galaxy suppresses star formation by disturbing molecular gas, highlighting a significant role of radio jets in galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new ALMA observations revealing how radio jets influence molecular gas dynamics and star formation in a massive spiral galaxy, a novel case linking AGN activity to star-formation suppression.
Findings
Radio jets induce high-velocity gas motions preventing star formation.
Star formation rates are 50-75 times lower than expected from the Kennicutt-Schmidt law.
The galaxy's baryon fraction is near the cosmic average, unlike other baryon-rich spirals.
Abstract
It has long been suspected that powerful radio sources may lower the efficiency with which stars form from the molecular gas in their host galaxy, but so far, alternative mechanisms, in particular related to the stellar mass distribution in the massive bulges of their host galaxies, are not ruled out. We present new ALMA CO(1-0) interferometry of cold molecular gas in the nearby (z=0.0755), massive (M_stellar=4x10^11 M_sun), isolated, late-type spiral galaxy 2MASSX J23453269-044925, which is outstanding for having two pairs of powerful, giant radio jets, and a bright X-ray halo. The molecular gas is in a massive (M_gas=2x10^10 M_sun), 24 kpc wide, rapidly rotating ring, which is associated with the inner stellar disk. Broad (FWHM=70-180 km s^-1) lines with complex profiles associated with the radio source are seen over large regions in the ring, indicating gas velocities that are high…
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