Mechanical AGN Feedback: Controlling the Thermodynamical Evolution of Elliptical Galaxies
M. Gaspari, F. Brighenti, P. Temi

TL;DR
This study uses 3D hydrodynamic simulations to show that mechanical AGN feedback effectively prevents cooling flows in elliptical galaxies, reproducing observed features and maintaining galaxy stability.
Contribution
It extends previous models by demonstrating that mechanical AGN outflows can regulate cooling flows across a broad range of elliptical galaxy masses.
Findings
Mechanical AGN outflows can prevent cooling catastrophes in elliptical galaxies.
Simulations reproduce observed features like bubbles, shock cocoons, and cold gas.
Feedback efficiency varies with galaxy mass and environment.
Abstract
A fundamental gap in the current understanding of galaxies concerns the thermodynamical evolution of the ordinary, baryonic matter. On one hand, radiative emission drastically decreases the thermal energy content of the interstellar plasma (ISM), inducing a slow cooling flow toward the centre. On the other hand, the active galactic nucleus (AGN) struggles to prevent the runaway cooling catastrophe, injecting huge amount of energy in the ISM. The present study intends to deeply investigate the role of mechanical AGN feedback in (isolated or massive) elliptical galaxies, extending and completing the mass range of tested cosmic environments. Our previously successful feedback models, in galaxy clusters and groups, demonstrated that AGN outflows, self-regulated by cold gas accretion, are able to properly quench the cooling flow, without destroying the cool core. Via 3D hydrodynamic…
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