Simulations of momentum feedback by black hole winds
Sergei Nayakshin, Chris Power (Leicester)

TL;DR
This paper uses numerical simulations to explore how supermassive black hole winds influence galaxy evolution, highlighting the importance of SMBH feeding mechanisms and feedback effects on star formation.
Contribution
It demonstrates that simple spherical models explain key SMBH-galaxy correlations, while more complex models reveal challenges and implications for SMBH feeding and feedback processes.
Findings
Simple models explain $M_{bh}-\sigma$ and $M_{NC}-\sigma$ relations.
Anisotropic feedback models show inconsistencies with observations.
SMBH outflows can induce turbulence, affecting star formation.
Abstract
The observed super-massive black hole (SMBH) mass -- galaxy velocity dispersion () correlation may be established when winds/outflows from the SMBH drive gas out of the potential wells of classical bulges. Here we present numerical simulations of this process in a static isothermal potential. Simple spherically symmetric models of SMBH feedback at the Eddington luminosity can successfully explain the and nuclear cluster mass correlations, as well as why larger bulges host SMBHs while smaller ones host nuclear star clusters. However these models do not specify how SMBHs feed on infalling gas whilst simultaneously producing feedback that drives gas out of the galaxy. More complex models with rotation and/or anisotropic feedback allow SMBHs to feed via a disc or regions not exposed to SMBH winds, but in these more realistic…
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