论文标题
恒星反馈调节的黑洞生长:从核到光晕尺度的驱动因素
Stellar feedback-regulated black hole growth: driving factors from nuclear to halo scales
论文作者
论文摘要
最近对星系形成的几个模拟预测了超大质量黑洞(BH)积聚的两个主要阶段:早期,高度间歇性的阶段(在此期间,BHS相对于局部规模关系,质量不足),然后是加速生长的阶段。我们研究了从火灾项目的宇宙缩放模拟中驱动BH积聚过渡的物理因素,从矮星系到足够庞大的星系,以托管发光的类星体。模拟模型多通道恒星反馈,但忽略了AGN反馈。我们表明,包括光环质量,星系恒星质量在内的多种物理特性以及中央重力电势的深度与加速的BH加油相关:这些性质中的恒定阈值通常在加速BH加速的〜0.1 Hubble时间内交叉。当内部1 kPc的恒星表面密度越过阈值Sigma1〜10^9.5 msun/kpc^2时,黑洞质量急剧增加,这是一个特征值,高于重力以防止恒星反馈弹出气体,并且类似于观察到的星系上方的值。我们进一步表明,加速的BH生长与长寿命,薄的气盘以及内膜内层培养基的病毒化相关。 Halo质量MH〜10^12 MSUN和恒星质量MSTAR〜10^10.5 MSUN,BH生长加速对应于〜l*星系。恒星反馈在从高于此质量量表的核中驱射气体时效率低下的事实可能在解释为什么AGN反馈在〜l*上方的星系中最重要。
Several recent simulations of galaxy formation predict two main phases of supermassive black hole (BH) accretion: an early, highly intermittent phase (during which BHs are under-massive relative to local scaling relations), followed by a phase of accelerated growth. We investigate physical factors that drive the transition in BH accretion in cosmological zoom-in simulations from the FIRE project, ranging from dwarf galaxies to galaxies sufficiently massive to host luminous quasars. The simulations model multi-channel stellar feedback, but neglect AGN feedback. We show that multiple physical properties, including halo mass, galaxy stellar mass, and depth of the central gravitational potential correlate with accelerated BH fueling: constant thresholds in these properties are typically crossed within ~0.1 Hubble time of accelerated BH fueling. Black hole masses increase sharply when the stellar surface density in the inner 1 kpc crosses a threshold Sigma1 ~ 10^9.5 Msun/kpc^2, a characteristic value above which gravity prevents stellar feedback from ejecting gas, and similar to the value above which galaxies are observed to quench. We further show that accelerated BH growth correlates with the emergence of long-lived, thin gas disks, as well as with virialization of the inner circumgalactic medium. The halo mass Mh ~ 10^12 Msun and stellar mass Mstar ~ 10^10.5 Msun at which BH growth accelerates correspond to ~L* galaxies. The fact that stellar feedback becomes inefficient at ejecting gas from the nucleus above this mass scale may play an important role in explaining why AGN feedback appears to be most important in galaxies above ~L*.