Resolved Maps of Gas and Dust in a Massive Quiescent Galaxy at z=2 from INQUEST-JWST: Evidence of Accretion and Rejuvenation
Sai Gangula, Andrew B. Newman, Meng Gu, Sirio Belli, Katherine E. Whitaker + 8 more
TLDR
JWST observations of a massive quiescent galaxy at z=2 reveal accreted gas and dust, suggesting rejuvenation and fueling episodic AGN feedback.
Key contributions
- JWST/NIRSpec IFU maps gas and dust in a lensed quiescent galaxy at z~2 with unprecedented resolution.
- Neutral gas shows clear rotation aligned with the stellar disk, but its complex distribution suggests accretion.
- Star formation history indicates a rejuvenation event ~500 Myrs ago, supporting the accretion hypothesis.
- A gas clump near the SMBH illustrates a mechanism for episodic AGN fueling, maintaining quiescence.
Why it matters
This study provides the first resolved maps of gas and dust in a distant quiescent galaxy, challenging assumptions about gas consumption. It highlights accretion and rejuvenation as key processes, offering insights into galaxy evolution and AGN feedback in the early universe.
Original Abstract
Quiescent galaxies in the distant universe exhibit a range of gas content that may indicate a variety of quenching processes are at play. Mapping the distribution and kinematics of the gas can illuminate its origins, but nearly all such observations have been unresolved. We present JWST/NIRSpec IFU observations of MRG-M0138, a gravitationally lensed, massive quiescent galaxy at $z\sim2$ observed as part of the INQUEST-JWST survey. We use Na I D absorption, which we detect in excess of the stellar absorption over most of the galaxy, to trace the kinematics and spatial distribution of the neutral gas in 219 spatial bins. The gas exhibits clear rotation that is kinematically aligned with the stellar disk. Both the gas and dust have a complex spatial structure, including an off-nuclear clump, a dust lane, and patches in the outer disk. The non-equilibrium distribution suggests that the gas was accreted. Analysis of the galaxy's star formation history supports this interpretation by indicating a rejuvenation event 500 Myrs ago. We identify two plausibly associated galaxies and suggest that tidal interactions are a likely source of the accreted gas. Our results indicate that some of the variation in gas content among early quiescent galaxies is not related to differences in gas consumption timescales. The detection of a gas clump at a projected distance of $\sim90$ pc from the known supermassive black hole illustrates a mechanism to fuel the episodic AGN feedback that may maintain quiescence.
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