Neutral hydrogen in galaxy clusters: impact of AGN feedback and implications for intensity mapping
Francisco Villaescusa-Navarro, Susana Planelles, Stefano Borgani,, Matteo Viel, Elena Rasia, Giuseppe Murante, Klaus Dolag, Lisa K. Steinborn,, Veronica Biffi, Alexander M. Beck, Cinthia Ragone-Figueroa

TL;DR
This study uses advanced hydrodynamic simulations to quantify how AGN feedback influences neutral hydrogen in galaxy clusters, impacting intensity mapping measurements and our understanding of cosmic HI distribution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed quantification of AGN feedback effects on neutral hydrogen mass and distribution in galaxy clusters using improved SPH simulations.
Findings
AGN feedback reduces HI mass in halos by about 50%.
Neutral hydrogen mass scales with halo mass as M_HI ∝ M^{3/4}.
Only models with AGN feedback match observed Ω_HI b_HI values.
Abstract
By means of zoom-in hydrodynamic simulations we quantify the amount of neutral hydrogen (HI) hosted by groups and clusters of galaxies. Our simulations, which are based on an improved formulation of smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH), include radiative cooling, star formation, metal enrichment and supernova feedback, and can be split in two different groups, depending on whether feedback from active galactic nuclei (AGN) is turned on or off. Simulations are analyzed to account for HI self-shielding and the presence of molecular hydrogen. We find that the mass in neutral hydrogen of dark matter halos monotonically increases with the halo mass and can be well described by a power-law of the form . Our results point out that AGN feedback reduces both the total halo mass and its HI mass, although it is more efficient in removing HI. We conclude that AGN…
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