AGN Feedback in Galaxy Groups: the Delicate Touch of Self-Regulated Outflows
M. Gaspari, F. Brighenti, A. D'Ercole, C. Melioli

TL;DR
This paper investigates how active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback through outflows regulates cooling in galaxy groups, revealing that persistent, gentle outflows are essential for maintaining core features and differ from cluster-scale feedback.
Contribution
It demonstrates that self-regulated AGN feedback in galaxy groups requires persistent, gentle outflows, contrasting with the explosive feedback in galaxy clusters, and provides detailed 3D simulation results.
Findings
Self-regulated AGN feedback maintains cool core features in galaxy groups.
Galaxy groups require persistent, gentle outflows rather than rare, explosive events.
Simulations show cavity formation, turbulence, and metal mixing consistent with observations.
Abstract
AGN heating, through massive subrelativistic outflows, might be the key to solve the long-lasting `cooling flow problem' in cosmological systems. In a previous paper, we showed that cold accretion feedback and, to a lesser degree, Bondi self-regulated models are in fact able to quench cooling rates for several Gyr, at the same time preserving the mainc ool core features, like observed density and temperature profiles. Is it true also for lighter systems, such as galaxy groups? The answer is globally yes, although with remarkable differences. Adopting a modified version of the AMR code FLASH 3.2, we found that successful 3D simulations with cold and Bondi models are almost convergent in the galaxy group environment, with mechanical efficiencies in the range 5.e-4 - 1.e-3 and 5.e-2 - 1.e-1, respectively. The evolutionary storyline of galaxy groups is dominated by a quasi-continuous gentle…
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