JWST Confirmation of a Runaway Supermassive Black Hole via its Supersonic Bow Shock
Pieter van Dokkum, Connor Jennings, Imad Pasha, Charlie Conroy, Ish Kaul, Roberto Abraham, Shany Danieli, Aaron J. Romanowsky, Grant Tremblay

TL;DR
This paper provides observational evidence of a runaway supermassive black hole moving at supersonic speeds, confirmed by shock signatures and gas kinematics observed with JWST, supporting theories of black hole ejection mechanisms.
Contribution
First direct observational confirmation of a supersonic runaway supermassive black hole via shock and gas dynamics analysis using JWST data.
Findings
Black hole velocity estimated at approximately 954 km/s.
Gas line ratios indicate fast radiative shocks and rapid cooling.
The wake's energy suggests a black hole mass greater than 10^7 solar masses.
Abstract
We present JWST/NIRSpec IFU observations of a candidate runaway supermassive black hole at the tip of a 62 kpc-long linear feature at z=0.96. The JWST data show a sharp kinematic discontinuity at the tip, with a radial velocity change of km/s across 0.1'' (1 kpc). The velocity gradient, together with the projected post-shock flow velocity of km/s, is well described by a simple shock-compression model of a supersonic object, with a velocity of km/s and an inclination deg. The previously puzzling kinematics along the linear feature, with the observed radial velocity decreasing from km/s near the tip to km/s closer to the former host galaxy, are naturally explained as gradual downstream mixing of shocked gas with the circumgalactic medium through turbulent entrainment. The bow shock…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
