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Momentum driving: which physical processes dominate AGN feedback?

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TLDR
In this article, it was shown that the growth of the central supermassive black hole is very sensitive to the inclusion of the mass and momentum driving but is insensitive to the assumed mechanical efficiency.
Abstract
The deposition of mechanical feedback from a supermassive black hole (SMBH) in an active galactic nucleus (AGN) into the surrounding galaxy occurs via broad-line winds which must carry mass and radial momentum as well as energy. The effect can be summarized by the dimensionless parameter $\eta=dot{M_outflow}/dot{M_accretion}= (2 \epsilon_w c^2)/v_w^2$ where ($\epslion_w \equiv dot{E}_w/(dot{M_accretion} c^2)$) is the efficiency by which accreted matter is turned into wind energy in the disc surrounding the central SMBH. The outflowing mass and omentum are proportional to $\eta$, and many prior treatments have essentially assumed that $\eta=0$. We perform one- and two-dimensional simulations and find that the growth of the central SMBH is very sensitive to the inclusion of the mass and momentum driving but is insensitive to the assumed mechanical efficiency. For example in representative calculations, the omission of momentum and mass feedback leads to an hundred fold increase in the mass of the SMBH to over $10^{10} \Msun$. When allowance is made for momentum driving, the final SMBH mass is much lower and the wind efficiencies which lead to the most observationally acceptable results are relatively low with $\epsilon_w \lesssim 10^{-4}$.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hot Accretion Flows Around Black Holes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors classified the hot accretion flows into two broad classes: cold and hot, and showed that hot flows are associated with jets and strong winds, and that they are present in low-luminosity active galactic nuclei and in black hole X-ray binaries in the hard and quiescent states.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical Models of Galaxy Formation in a Cosmological Framework

TL;DR: The current status of models that employ two leading techniques to simulate the physics of galaxy formation: semianalytic models and numerical hydrodynamic simulations is reviewed in this paper, where the authors focus on a set of observational targets that describe the evolution of the global and structural properties of galaxies from roughly cosmic high noon (z ∼ 2 − 3) to the present.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical Models of Galaxy Formation in a Cosmological Framework

TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the current status of models that employ semi-analytic models and numerical hydrodynamic simulations to simulate the physics of galaxy formation and show remarkable convergence between different methods and make predictions that are in qualitative agreement with observations.
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The Cosmological Size and Velocity Dispersion Evolution of Massive Early-type Galaxies

TL;DR: In this article, 40 cosmological re-simulations of individual massive galaxies with present-day stellar masses of M∗ > 6.3 × 10 10 M⊙ were analyzed to investigate the physical origin of the observed strong increase in galaxy sizes and the decrease of the stellar velocity dispersions since redshift z ≈ 2.
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Theoretical Challenges in Galaxy Formation

TL;DR: In this article, a variety of plausible subresolution models were proposed to estimate the inflow to and outflow from forming galaxies because observations indicating low formation efficiency and strong circumgalactic presence of gas are persuasive.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Demography of massive dark objects in galaxy centers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors constructed dynamical models for a sample of 36 nearby galaxies with Hubble Space Telescope (HST) photometry and ground-based kinematics, assuming that each galaxy is axisymmetric, with a two-integral distribution function, arbitrary inclination angle, a position-independent stellar mass-to-light ratio, and a central massive dark object of arbitrary mass M•.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Demography of Massive Dark Objects in Galaxy Centres

TL;DR: In this article, the authors constructed dynamical models for a sample of 36 nearby galaxies with Hubble Space Telescope photometry and ground-based kinematics, assuming that each galaxy is axisymmetric, with a two-integral distribution function, arbitrary inclination angle, a position-independent stellar mass-to-light ratio Upsilon, and a central massive dark object of arbitrary mass M_bh.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy input from quasars regulates the growth and activity of black holes and their host galaxies

TL;DR: Simulations that simultaneously follow star formation and the growth of black holes during galaxy–galaxy collisions find that, in addition to generating a burst of star formation, a merger leads to strong inflows that feed gas to the supermassive black hole and thereby power the quasar.
Journal ArticleDOI

Advection-dominated Accretion: A Self-similar Solution

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider viscous rotating accretion flows in which most of the viscously dissipated energy is stored as entropy rather than being radiated, and obtain a family of self-similar solutions where the temperature of the accreting gas is nearly virial and the flow is quasi-spherical.
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