Stellar and Quasar Feedback in Concert: Effects on AGN Accretion, Obscuration, and Outflows
Philip F. Hopkins (Caltech), Paul Torrey (MIT), Claude-Andre, Faucher-Giguere (Northwestern), Eliot Quataert (Berkeley), Norman Murray, (CITA)

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore how feedback from stars and active galactic nuclei (AGN) interact with the interstellar medium, affecting black hole growth, obscuration, and outflows in galaxy centers.
Contribution
It presents a comprehensive simulation framework including stellar feedback, multi-phase cooling, and AGN winds to analyze their combined effects on galactic nuclei.
Findings
AGN winds significantly suppress nuclear star formation and black hole accretion.
The simulations produce outflow rates consistent with observations.
A self-consistent torus-like obscuration geometry emerges from feedback processes.
Abstract
We study the interaction of feedback from active galactic nuclei (AGN) and a multi-phase interstellar medium (ISM), in simulations including explicit stellar feedback, multi-phase cooling, accretion-disk winds, and Compton heating. We examine radii ~0.1-100 pc around a black hole (BH), where the accretion rate onto the BH is determined and where AGN-powered winds and radiation couple to the ISM. We conclude: (1) The BH accretion rate is determined by exchange of angular momentum between gas and stars in gravitational instabilities. This produces accretion rates ~0.03-1 Msun/yr, sufficient to power luminous AGN. (2) The gas disk in the galactic nucleus undergoes an initial burst of star formation followed by several Myrs where stellar feedback suppresses the star formation rate (SFR). (3) AGN winds injected at small radii with momentum fluxes ~L/c couple efficiently to the ISM and have…
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