Comparing Simulations of AGN Feedback
Mark L. A. Richardson, Evan Scannapieco, Julien Devriendt, Adrianne, Slyz, Robert J. Thacker, Yohan Dubois, James Wurster, and Joseph Silk

TL;DR
This study compares AMR and SPH cosmological simulations of galaxy clusters, highlighting differences in baryonic physics handling and the improved agreement when including AGN feedback, emphasizing the importance of feedback processes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of AMR and SPH methods in simulating galaxy clusters with complex baryonic physics, especially focusing on the effects of AGN feedback.
Findings
AMR and SPH agree in non-radiative cases.
Radiative cooling causes significant differences between methods.
AGN feedback leads to better agreement in simulated cluster properties.
Abstract
We perform adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) and smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) cosmological zoom simulations of a region around a forming galaxy cluster, comparing the ability of the methods to handle successively more complex baryonic physics. In the simplest, non-radiative case, the two methods are in good agreement with each other, but the SPH simulations generate central cores with slightly lower entropies and virial shocks at slightly larger radii, consistent with what has been seen in previous studies. The inclusion of radiative cooling, star formation, and stellar feedback leads to much larger differences between the two methods. Most dramatically, at z=5, rapid cooling in the AMR case moves the accretion shock well within the virial radius, while this shock remains near the virial radius in the SPH case, due to excess heating, coupled with poorer capturing of the shock…
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