Self-regulated growth of supermassive black holes by a dual jet/heating AGN feedback mechanism: methods, tests and implications for cosmological simulations
ArXiv 1108.011 (2011)
Abstract:
We develop a new sub-grid model for the growth of supermassive Black Holes (BHs) and their associated Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) feedback in hydrodynamical cosmological simulations. Assuming that BHs are created in the early stages of galaxy formation, they grow by mergers and accretion of gas at a Eddington-limited Bondi accretion rate. However this growth is regulated by AGN feedback which we model using two different modes: a quasar-heating mode when accretion rates onto the BHs are comparable to the Eddington rate, and a radio-jet mode at lower accretion rates. In other words, our feedback model deposits energy as a succession of thermal bursts and jet outflows depending on the properties of the gas surrounding the BHs. We assess the plausibility of such a model by comparing our results to observational measurements of the coevolution of BHs and their host galaxy properties, and check their robustness with respect to numerical resolution. We show that AGN feedback must be a crucial physical ingredient for the formation of massive galaxies as it appears to be the only physical mechanism able to efficiently prevent the accumulation of and/or expel cold gas out of halos/galaxies and significantly suppress star formation. Our model predicts that the relationship between BHs and their host galaxy mass evolves as a function of redshift, because of the vigorous accretion of cold material in the early Universe that drives Eddington-limited accretion onto BHs. Quasar activity is also enhanced at high redshift. However, as structures grow in mass and lose their cold material through star formation and efficient BH feedback ejection, the AGN activity in the low-redshift Universe becomes more and more dominated by the radio mode, which powers jets through the hot circum-galactic medium.Self-regulated growth of supermassive black holes by a dual jet/heating AGN feedback mechanism: methods, tests and implications for cosmological simulations
(2011)
The environment and redshift dependence of accretion onto dark matter halos and subhalos
ArXiv 1106.4814 (2011)
Abstract:
A dark-matter-only Horizon Project simulation is used to investigate the environment- and redshift- dependence of accretion onto both halos and subhalos. These objects grow in the simulation via mergers and via accretion of diffuse non-halo material, and we measure the combined signal from these two modes of accretion. It is found that the halo accretion rate varies less strongly with redshift than predicted by the Extended Press-Schechter (EPS) formalism and is dominated by minor-merger and diffuse accretion events at z=0, for all halos. These latter growth mechanisms may be able to drive the radio-mode feedback hypothesised for recent galaxy-formation models, and have both the correct accretion rate and form of cosmological evolution. The low redshift subhalo accretors in the simulation form a mass-selected subsample safely above the mass resolution limit that reside in the outer regions of their host, with ~70% beyond their host's virial radius, where they are probably not being significantly stripped of mass. These subhalos accrete, on average, at higher rates than halos at low redshift and we argue that this is due to their enhanced clustering at small scales. At cluster scales, the mass accretion rate onto halos and subhalos at low redshift is found to be only weakly dependent on environment and we confirm that at z~2 halos accrete independently of their environment at all scales, as reported by other authors. By comparing our results with an observational study of black hole growth, we support previous suggestions that at z>1, dark matter halos and their associated central black holes grew coevally, but show that by the present day, dark matter halos could be accreting at fractional rates that are up to a factor 3-4 higher than their associated black holes.The environment and redshift dependence of accretion onto dark matter halos and subhalos
(2011)