The most luminous quasars do not live in the most massive dark matter haloes at any redshift
N. Fanidakis, A. V. Maccio, C. M. Baugh, C. G. Lacey, C. S. Frenk

TL;DR
This study challenges the assumption that the most luminous quasars reside in the most massive dark matter haloes, showing instead they inhabit average-mass haloes due to AGN feedback effects, with implications for understanding galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It demonstrates through galaxy formation models that luminous quasars are not in the most massive haloes, highlighting the role of AGN feedback in quasar host environments.
Findings
Quasars at high luminosity are in average-mass dark matter haloes.
High redshift quasars do not inhabit the largest dark matter haloes.
Descendants of high-z quasars show diverse morphologies and halo masses.
Abstract
Quasars represent the brightest Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) in the Universe and are thought to indicate the location of prodigiously growing Black Holes (BHs), with luminosities as high as 10^48 erg/sec. It is often expected though that such an extremely energetic process will take place in the most massive bound structures in the dark matter (DM) distribution. We show that in contrast to this expectation, in a galaxy formation model which includes AGN feedback, quasars are predicted to live in average DM halo environments with typical masses of a few times 10^12 Msun. This fundamental prediction arises from the fact that quasar activity (i.e., BH accretion with luminosity greater than 10^46 erg/sec) is inhibited in DM haloes where AGN feedback operates. The galaxy hosts of quasars in our simulations are identified with over massive (in gas and stars) spheroidal galaxies, in which BH…
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