Environmental effects on the growth of super massive black holes and AGN feedback
Min-Su Shin (Princeton University), Jeremiah P. Ostriker (Princeton, University, University of Cambridge), Luca Ciotti (University of Bologna)

TL;DR
This study uses hydrodynamical simulations to explore how gas stripping in different environments affects SMBH growth, star formation, and galaxy evolution, highlighting the impact of environmental effects on galaxy quasar activity.
Contribution
It introduces a model incorporating gas stripping effects via a truncation radius, revealing how environment influences SMBH growth and galaxy properties.
Findings
SMBH mass decreases with increased gas stripping
Star formation declines significantly with environmental effects
Quasar activity duration shortens as gas stripping intensifies
Abstract
We investigate how environmental effects by gas stripping alter the growth of a super massive black hole (SMBH) and its host galaxy evolution, by means of 1D hydrodynamical simulations that include both mechanical and radiative AGN feedback effects. By changing the truncation radius of the gas distribution (R_t), beyond which gas stripping is assumed to be effective, we simulate possible environments for satellite and central galaxies in galaxy clusters and groups. The continuous escape of gas outside the truncation radius strongly suppresses star formation, while the growth of the SMBH is less affected by gas stripping because the SMBH accretion is primarily ruled by the density of the central region. As we allow for increasing environmental effects - the truncation radius decreasing from about 410 to 50 kpc - we find that the final SMBH mass declines from about 10^9 to 8 x 10^8 Msol,…
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