Constraining AGN Feedback in Massive Ellipticals with South Pole Telescope Measurements of the Thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect
Alexander Spacek, Evan Scannapieco, Seth Cohen, Bhavin Joshi, Philip, Mauskopf

TL;DR
This study measures the thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect around massive elliptical galaxies to constrain AGN feedback energy, providing new observational limits that challenge existing galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It presents the first measurement of the tSZ effect around a large sample of massive ellipticals at z >= 0.5, constraining AGN feedback energy with improved statistical significance.
Findings
Detected tSZ signal at 2.2 sigma for low redshift galaxies
Estimated thermal energies higher than simple models without AGN feedback
Provided constraints on AGN feedback energy applicable to galaxy formation simulations
Abstract
Energetic feedback due to active galactic nuclei (AGN) is likely to play an important role in the observed anti-hierarchical trend in the evolution of galaxies, and yet the energy injected into the circumgalactic medium by this process is largely unknown. One promising approach to constrain this feedback is through measurements of CMB spectral distortions due to the thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (tSZ) effect, whose magnitude is directly proportional to the energy input by AGN. Here we co-add South Pole Telescope SZ (SPT-SZ) survey data around a large set of massive quiescent elliptical galaxies at z >= 0.5. We use data from the Blanco Cosmology Survey and VISTA Hemisphere Survey to create a large catalog of galaxies split up into two redshift bins, with 3394 galaxies at 0.5 <= z <= 1.0 and 924 galaxies at 1.0 <= z <= 1.5, with typical stellar masses of 1.5 x 10^11 M_Sun. We then co-add the…
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