WISDOM Project - XXVII. Giant molecular clouds of the lenticular galaxy NGC 1387: similarities with spiral galaxy clouds

(2026)

Authors:

Fu-Heng Liang, Martin Bureau, Lijie Liu, Pandora Dominiak, Woorak Choi, Timothy A Davis, Jacob Elford, Jindra Gensior, Anan Lu, Ilaria Ruffa, Selcuk Topal, Thomas G Williams, Hengyue Zhang

A spatially resolved evolutionary sequence of multi-wavelength AGN host galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press (OUP) 546:4 (2026) stag217

Authors:

Gaoxiang Jin, Guinevere Kauffmann, Y Sophia Dai, Martin J Hardcastle, Bohan Yue

Abstract:

ABSTRACT We study the spatially resolved star formation, gas ionization, and outflow properties of 1813 active galactic nuclei (AGNs) from the MaNGA survey, which we classify into infrared (IR), broad-line (BL), narrow-line (NL), and radio (RD) AGNs based on their mid-infrared colours, optical spectra, and/or radio photometry. We also provide estimations of AGN power at different wavelengths. AGN incidence is found to increase with stellar mass following a power law, with the high-mass end dominated by RDAGNs and the low-mass end dominated by NLAGNs. Compared to their mass-matched non-AGN counterparts, we find that IRAGNs, BLAGNs, and NLAGNs on average show enhanced specific star formation rates, younger stellar populations, and harder ionization towards the centre. RDAGNs, in contrast, show radial profiles similar to quiescent galaxies. [O鈥塱ii] outflows are more common and stronger in BL/IRAGNs, while RDAGNs on average show no outflow features. The outflow incidence increases with [O鈥塱ii] luminosity, and the features in BL/IRAGNs on average extend to $\sim$2聽kpc from the nuclei. We further discuss a possible evolutionary sequence of AGNs and their host galaxies, where AGNs with strong emission lines or dust tori are present in star-forming galaxies. Later, young compact radio jets emerge, the host galaxies gradually quench, and the AGN hosts eventually evolve into globally quiescent systems with larger radio jets that prevent further gas cooling.

Black Holes as Telescopes: Discovering Supermassive Binaries through Quasiperiodic Lensed Starlight

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society (APS) 136:6 (2026) 061403

Authors:

Hanxi Wang, Miguel Zumalac谩rregui, Bence Kocsis

Abstract:

Supermassive black hole (SMBH) binary systems are an unavoidable outcome of galaxy mergers. Their dynamics encode valuable information about their formation and growth, the composition of their host galactic nuclei, the evolution of galaxies, and the nature of gravity. Many SMBH binaries with separations pc-kpc have been found, but closer (subparsec) binaries remain to be confirmed. Identifying these systems may elucidate how binaries evolve past the 鈥渇inal parsec鈥 until gravitational radiation drives them to coalescence. Methods to discover and characterize SMBH binaries can shed light on these important questions and potentially open new multimessenger channels. Here we show that SMBH binaries in nonactive galactic nuclei can be identified and characterized by the gravitational lensing of individual bright stars, located behind them in the host galaxy. The rotation of 鈥渃austics鈥濃攔egions where sources are hugely magnified due to the SMBH binary鈥檚 orbit and inspiral鈥攍eads to quasiperiodic lensing of starlight (QPLS). The extreme lensing magnification of individual bright stars produces a significant variation in the host galaxies鈥 luminosity; their lightcurve traces the orbit of the SMBH binary and its evolution, analogous to the waveforms recorded by gravitational-wave (GW) detectors. QPLS probes the population of sources observable by pulsar timing arrays and space detectors (LISA, TianQin), offering advance warning triggers for merging SMBHs for coincident or follow-up GW detections. SMBH population models predict 1鈥50 [ 190 5000 ] ( n / pc 3 ) QPLS binaries with period less than 10[40]聽yr with comparable masses and redshift z < 0.3 , where n is the stellar number density. Additionally, stellar and orbital motion will lead to frequent instances of single or double flares caused by SMBHBs with longer periods. This novel signature can be searched for in a wealth of existing and upcoming time-domain photometric data: identifying quasiperiodic variability in galactic lightcurves will reveal an ensemble of binary systems and illuminate outstanding questions around them.

Deblending the MIGHTEE-COSMOS survey with XID+: the resolved radio source counts to S 1.4 鈮 5渭Jy

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 547:2 (2026) stag285

Authors:

Eliab Malefahlo, Matt J Jarvis, Mario G Santos, Catherine Cress, Daniel JB Smith, Catherine Hale, Jos茅 Afonso, Imogen H Whittam, Mattia Vaccari, Ian Heywood, Shuowen Jin, Fangxia An

Abstract:

Deep radio continuum surveys provide fundamental constraints on galaxy evolution, but source confusion limits sensitivity to the faintest sources. We present a complete framework for producing high-fidelity deblended radio catalogues from the confused MIGHTEE maps using the probabilistic deblending framework XID+ and prior positions from deep multi-wavelength data in the COSMOS field. To assess performance, we construct MIGHTEE-like simulations based on the Tiered Radio Extragalactic Continuum Simulation radio source population, ensuring a realistic distribution of star-forming galaxies and active galactic nuclei for validation. Through these simulations, we show that prior catalogue purity is the dominant factor controlling deblending accuracy: a high-purity prior, containing only sources with a high likelihood of radio detection, recovers accurate flux densities and reproduces input source counts down to (where thermal noise). On the other hand, a complete prior overestimates the source counts due to spurious detections. Our optimal strategy combines the high-purity prior with a mask that removes sources detected above Jy. Applied to the 1.3 deg area of the MIGHTEE-COSMOS field defined by overlapping multi-wavelength data, this procedure yields a deblended catalogue of 89 562 sources. The derived 1.4 GHz source counts agree with independent P(D) analyses and indicate that we resolve the radio background to Jy. We also define a recommended high-fidelity sample of 20 757 sources, based on detection significance, flux density, and goodness-of-fit, which provides reliable flux densities for individual sources in the confusion-limited regime.

Evidence of Feedback Effects in Low-luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei Revealed by JWST Spectroscopy

The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 998:2 (2026) L32

Authors:

Lulu Zhang, Chris Packham, Erin KS Hicks, Ric I Davies, Daniel E Delaney, Francoise Combes, Miguel Pereira-Santaella, Almudena Alonso-Herrero, Claudio Ricci, Omaira Gonz谩lez-Mart铆n, Laura Hermosa Mu帽oz, Ismael Garc铆a- Bernete, Cristina Ramos Almeida, Dimitra Rigopoulou, Fergus R Donnan, Enrica Bellocchi, Nancy A Levenson, Martin J Ward, Santiago Garc铆a-Burillo, Sebastian F Hoenig

Abstract:

This Letter presents an analysis of the infrared (鈭3鈥28 渭m) spectra extracted from the nuclear (r < 150 pc) regions of four low-luminosity active galactic nuclei (AGN), observed by JWST NIRSpec/integral field unit and MIRI/Medium Resolution Spectroscopy as an extension of the Galaxy Activity, Torus, and Outflow Survey. We find that, compared to higher-luminosity AGN, these low-luminosity AGN exhibit distinct properties in their emission of ionized gas, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and molecular hydrogen (H2). Specifically, the low-luminosity AGN exhibit relatively weak high ionization potential lines (e.g., [Ne V] and [O IV]), and the line ratios suggest that fast radiative shocks (with vs of 鈭100s km s鈭1) are the primary excitation source of ionized gas therein. Under the low-excitation conditions of their nuclear regions, these low-luminosity AGN generally exhibit a higher fraction of PAHs with large size (NC 鈮 200), reflecting the preferential destruction of smaller PAH molecules by AGN feedback. Furthermore, the H2 transitions in these low-luminosity AGN are not fully thermalized, with slow, plausibly jet-driven molecular shocks (with vs 鈮 10 km s鈭1) likely being the extra excitation source. Taken together with results from the literature, these findings indicate that feedback operates in both low- and high-luminosity AGN, although its impact varies with AGN luminosity. In particular, systematic variations in PAH band ratios are found across AGN, demonstrating the differing influence of feedback in AGN of varying luminosities and highlighting the potential of PAH band ratios as diagnostics for distinguishing kinetic- and radiative-mode AGN feedback.