High-resolution radio investigations of nearby galaxies have revealed a hidden population of weakly active black holes in the local Universe that was so far difficult to detect.
Hunting these hidden monsters is essential as they can inject energy into their surroundings through jets and outflows, influencing star formation rates and the long-term evolution of galaxies.
Astronomers believe that almost every galaxy harbours a massive black hole at its centre. However, many of these black holes remain extremely faint and spotting them was a challenge.
An international team of astronomers, including Dr. Aru Beri from the Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA), an autonomous institution under the Department of Science and Technology (DST), used the e-MERLIN radio array, to observed 280 nearby galaxies selected from the Palomar sample and probe their central regions on parsec scales.


The researchers detected compact radio emission from the centres of nearly one-quarter of the galaxies, revealing the presence of weakly accreting supermassive black holes that are often missed in conventional observations. Most detected sources appear extremely compact, while a smaller fraction shows jet-like radio structures extending over several parsecs.

Fig 1: The locations of the 7 e-MERLIN radio telescopes across the UK, functioning as an interferometer (Credits: Jodrell Bank, UK)
The study represents one of the first statistically complete high-resolution radio surveys capable of isolating faint black hole activity in nearby galaxies. Earlier studies either lacked the sensitivity and angular resolution needed to separate weak nuclear emission from surrounding stellar activity or focused on smaller and potentially biased galaxy samples. By targeting a large and well-defined sample at very high radio resolution, the researchers were able to systematically uncover low-level black hole activity in ordinary nearby galaxies.

