50-year mystery solved: Astronomers finally detect wind from Milky Way's giant black hole

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Northwestern University astrophysicists Lena Murchikova and Mark Gorski have finally resolved a five-decade-old astronomical enigma, reporting the first conclusive detection of a gentle, persistent wind emanating from Sagittarius A (Sgr A), the Milky Way's supermassive black hole. Published this week in Astrophysical Journal Letters, the discovery leverages five years of Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations, fundamentally reshaping our understanding of how even quiet black holes sculpt their galactic environments. This long-sought 'breeze,' not the violent jets of more active black holes, was identified through a distinct three-light-year-long, cone-shaped cavity near Sgr A, notably depleted of cold carbon monoxide and corroborated by hot gas detected via the Chandra X-ray Observatory. The finding confirms that Sgr A behaves like other supermassive black hole across the universe, even in its current quiescent state, impacting crucial processes like star formation within the galaxy—either by sweeping away or compressing stellar fuel over an estimated 20,000-year activity period. While the revelation resolves a critical theoretical prediction, it also prompts further investigation; astrophysicist Rebecca Diesing notes the need for additional evidence, such as measuring gas velocities or observing the cavity's dynamic changes. Future observations will likely focus on directly probing these gentle outflows to precisely quantify their long-term influence on galactic evolution and star formation, thereby refining our models of the cosmos.