The effects of baryon physics, black holes and AGN feedback on the mass distribution in clusters of galaxies
Davide Martizzi, Romain Teyssier, Ben Moore, Tina Wentz

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution cosmological simulations to explore how baryonic physics, especially AGN feedback from supermassive black holes, influences the matter distribution in galaxy clusters, revealing core formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It demonstrates the significant impact of SMBH-driven AGN feedback on the density profiles and core formation in galaxy clusters, contrasting with standard galaxy formation models.
Findings
AGN feedback quenches star formation and reduces cold gas.
Density cores of 10 kpc form in dark and stellar matter profiles.
Multiple processes contribute to core formation, including black hole dynamics and gas outflows.
Abstract
The spatial distribution of matter in clusters of galaxies is mainly determined by the dominant dark matter component, however, physical processes involving baryonic matter are able to modify it significantly. We analyse a set of 500 pc resolution cosmological simulations of a cluster of galaxies with mass comparable to Virgo, performed with the AMR code RAMSES. We compare the mass density profiles of the dark, stellar and gaseous matter components of the cluster that result from different assumptions for the subgrid baryonic physics and galaxy formation processes. First, the prediction of a gravity only N-body simulation is compared to that of a hydrodynamical simulation with standard galaxy formation recipes, then all results are compared to a hydrodynamical simulation which includes thermal AGN feedback from Super Massive Black Holes (SMBH). We find the usual effects of overcooling…
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