Feedback from central black holes in elliptical galaxies. III: models with both radiative and mechanical feedback
L. Ciotti (Dept. of Astronomy, Univ. of Bologna), J.P. Ostriker, (Princeton University & IoA Cambridge), D. Proga (Dept. of Physics and, Astronomy, University of Nevada)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to show that combined radiative and mechanical feedback from AGN effectively regulates galaxy evolution, matching observations and highlighting the importance of mechanical feedback with lower efficiency than previously assumed.
Contribution
It demonstrates that including both radiative and mechanical AGN feedback in models reproduces observed properties of elliptical galaxies, emphasizing the need for lower mechanical feedback efficiency.
Findings
Mechanical feedback is necessary but less efficient than commonly assumed.
AGN bursts are frequent at z>1 and decline over time.
Approximately 63% of recycled gas is expelled from galaxies since z~2.
Abstract
We find, from high-resolution hydro simulations, that winds from AGN effectively heat the inner parts (~100 pc) of elliptical galaxies, reducing infall to the central SMBH; and radiative (photoionization and X-ray) heating reduces cooling flows at the kpc scale. Including both types of feedback with (peak) efficiencies of 3 10^{-4} < epsilon_mech < 10^{-3} and of epsilon_rad ~10^{-1.3} respectively, produces systems having duty-cycles, central SMBH masses, X-ray luminosities, optical light profiles, and E+A spectra in accord with the broad suite of modern observations of massive elliptical systems. Our main conclusion is that mechanical feedback (including all three of energy, momentum and mass) is necessary but the efficiency, based on several independent arguments must be a factor of 10 lower than is commonly assumed. Bursts are frequent at z>1 and decline in frequency towards the…
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