JWST Unveils Farthest Dormant Black Hole, Weighing 6 Billion Suns in Ancient Galaxy

June 5, 2026
JWST Unveils Farthest Dormant Black Hole, Weighing 6 Billion Suns in Ancient Galaxy
  • Using gravitational lensing to magnify a distant, quiescent galaxy, researchers employed integral field spectroscopy with JWST to map stellar motions and resolve the black hole’s sphere of influence, enabling a direct dynamical mass measurement.

  • The James Webb Space Telescope, coupled with stellar dynamics and lensing, provided the data needed to weigh the dormant black hole in this galaxy.

  • Observations with JWST mapped stellar velocities through integral field spectroscopy, constraining the black hole’s gravitational influence in the distant galaxy.

  • The result adds a pivotal data point for understanding how black hole masses scale with their host galaxies across cosmic history.

  • The dormant black hole weighs about six billion solar masses in a galaxy whose stars are largely absent, indicating a quiescent system that may have hosted a quasar in the past.

  • The measured mass aligns with one local black hole–bulge relation but conflicts with another, underscoring ongoing questions about black hole–galaxy co-evolution at high redshift.

  • Researchers advocate applying this dynamical, lens-assisted method to more distant galaxies to build a larger census of black hole growth and its role in galaxy evolution.

  • This observation offers a rare window into the early universe (roughly three billion years after the Big Bang) and demonstrates a viable technique for weighing black holes in distant galaxies.

  • Led by Andrew B. Newman, the team measured the mass of the inactive supermassive black hole in galaxy MRG-M0138 at redshift 1.95, about ten billion years ago.

  • MRG-M0138 hosts a dormant black hole that is the farthest of its kind observed to date, lying over 10 billion light-years away.

  • The inferred mass is 6.0 minus 1.7 plus 2.1 times 10^9 solar masses, with asymmetric uncertainties.

  • This work highlights the importance of direct dynamical mass measurements for testing how black hole growth tracks host galaxy properties over cosmic time.

Summary based on 2 sources


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Sources

Galaxy Lens Shares Black Hole Mass At Redshift 2

Quantum Zeitgeist • Jun 6, 2026

Galaxy Lens Shares Black Hole Mass At Redshift 2

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