Consequences of Mechanical and Radiative Feedback from Black Holes in Disc Galaxy Mergers

Abstract

We study the effect of AGN mechanical and radiation feedback on the formation of bulge dominated galaxies via mergers of disc galaxies. The merging galaxies have mass-ratios of 1:1 to 6:1 and include pre-existing hot gaseous halos to properly account for the global impact of AGN feedback. Using smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulation code (GADGET-3) we compare three models with different AGN feedback models: (1) no black hole and no AGN feedback; (2) thermal AGN feedback; and (3) mechanical and radiative AGN feedback. The last model is motivated by observations of broad line quasars which show winds with initial velocities of vw 10,000 km/s and also heating associated with the central AGN X-ray radiation. The primary changes in gas properties due to mechanical AGN feedback are lower thermal X-ray luminosity from the final galaxy - in better agreement with observations - and galactic outflows with higher velocity 1000 km/s similar to recent direct observations of nearby merger remnants. The kinetic energy of the outflowing gas is a factor of 20 higher than in the thermal feedback case. All merger remnants with momentum-based AGN feedback with vw 10,000 km/s and εw=2 × 10-3, independent of their progenitor mass-ratios, reproduce the observed relations between stellar velocity dispersion and black hole mass (M bh - σ) as well as X-ray luminosity (LX - σ) with 1037.5 erg/s LX (0.3-8~ keV) 1039.2 erg/s for velocity dispersions in the range of 120 km/s σ 190 km/s. In addition, the mechanical feedback produces a much greater AGN variability. We also show that gas is more rapidly and impulsively stripped from the galactic centres driving a moderate increase in galaxy size and decrease in central density with the mechanical AGN feedback model.

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