AGN outflows trigger starbursts in gas-rich galaxies
Kastytis Zubovas, Sergei Nayakshin, Andrew King, Mark Wilkinson

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that AGN outflows can positively influence star formation in gas-rich galaxies by over-compressing cold gas, leading to a correlation between AGN and starburst luminosities, with implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical model linking AGN outflows to triggered starbursts and predicts a statistical correlation between AGN and starburst luminosities based on galaxy gas morphology.
Findings
Star formation rate increases until feedback halts further compression.
A nearly linear correlation L_* ∝ L_{AGN}^{5/6} between starburst and AGN luminosities.
Maximum starburst luminosity can be up to 50 times the AGN luminosity in uniform gas disks.
Abstract
Recent well resolved numerical simulations of AGN feedback have shown that its effects on the host galaxy may be not only negative but also positive. In the late gas poor phase, AGN feedback blows the gas away and terminates star formation. However, in the gas-rich phase(s), AGN outflows trigger star formation by over-compressing cold dense gas and thus provide positive feedback on their hosts. In this paper we study this AGN-triggered starburst effect. We show that star formation rate in the burst increases until the star formation feedback counteracts locally the AGN outflow compression. Globally, this predicts a strong nearly linear statistical correlation between the AGN and starburst bolometric luminosities in disc galaxies, L_* \propto L_{AGN}^{5/6}. The correlation is statistical only because AGN activity may fluctuate on short time scales (as short as tens of years), and because…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
