The Growth of Massive Black Holes in Galaxy Merger Simulations with Feedback by Radiation Pressure
Jackson DeBuhr, Eliot Quataert, Chung-Pei Ma

TL;DR
This study uses galaxy merger simulations with radiation pressure feedback to explore massive black hole growth, showing self-regulation and consistency with observed relations without halting star formation.
Contribution
Introduces a new feedback model based on radiation pressure and demonstrates its effectiveness in reproducing observed black hole scaling relations.
Findings
Black hole growth is self-regulated by radiation pressure feedback.
Simulations match observed M_BH-sigma relation with optical depth tau ~ 25.
Feedback does not need to terminate star formation to explain black hole growth.
Abstract
We study the growth of massive black holes (BH) in galaxies using smoothed particle hydrodynamic simulations of major galaxy mergers with new implementations of BH accretion and feedback. The effect of BH accretion on gas in its host galaxy is modeled by depositing momentum at a rate ~ tau L/c into the ambient gas, where L is the luminosity produced by accretion onto the BH and tau is the wavelength-averaged optical depth of the galactic nucleus to the AGN's radiation (a free parameter of our model). The accretion rate onto the BH is relatively independent of our subgrid accretion model and is instead determined by the BH's dynamical impact on its host galaxy: BH accretion is thus self-regulated rather than `supply limited.' We show that the final BH mass and total stellar mass formed during a merger are more robust predictions of the simulations than the time dependence of the star…
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