@article{13390, keywords = {Space and Planetary Science, Astronomy and Astrophysics}, author = {Joseph Silk and Mitchell Begelman and Colin Norman and Adi Nusser and Rosemary Wyse}, title = {Which Came First: Supermassive Black Holes or Galaxies? Insights from JWST}, abstract = {

Insights from JWST observations suggest that active galactic nuclei feedback evolved from a short-lived, high-redshift phase in which radiatively cooled turbulence and/or momentum-conserving outflows stimulated vigorous early star formation (“positive” feedback), to late, energy-conserving outflows that depleted halo gas reservoirs and quenched star formation. The transition between these two regimes occurred at z ∼ 6, independently of galaxy mass, for simple assumptions about the outflows and star formation process. Observational predictions provide circumstantial evidence for the prevalence of massive black holes at the highest redshifts hitherto observed, and we discuss their origins.

}, year = {2024}, journal = {The Astrophysical Journal Letters}, volume = {961}, pages = {L39}, month = {2024-01}, publisher = {American Astronomical Society}, issn = {2041-8205, 2041-8213}, doi = {10.3847/2041-8213/ad1bf0}, }