How to quench a galaxy
Andrew Pontzen, Michael Tremmel, Nina Roth, Hiranya V. Peiris,, Am\'elie Saintonge, Marta Volonteri, Tom Quinn, Fabio Governato

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations with varied merger histories to investigate how AGN activity and galaxy mergers influence star formation quenching, revealing that merger-induced disruption of gaseous disks is key.
Contribution
It introduces a controlled 'genetic modification' simulation approach to isolate the effects of merger ratios on galaxy quenching mechanisms.
Findings
Merger history influences whether a galaxy remains star-forming or quenched.
AGN feedback alone is insufficient; merger-induced disruption of gas disks is crucial.
Black hole accretion rates are low and similar across different merger scenarios.
Abstract
We show how the interplay between active galactic nuclei (AGN) and merger history determines whether a galaxy quenches star formation at high redshift. We first simulate, in a full cosmological context, a galaxy of total dynamical mass at . Then we systematically alter the accretion history of the galaxy by minimally changing the linear overdensity in the initial conditions. This "genetic modification" approach allows the generation of three sets of CDM initial conditions leading to maximum merger ratios of 1:10, 1:5 and 2:3 respectively. The changes leave the final halo mass, large scale structure and local environment unchanged, providing a controlled numerical experiment. Interaction between the AGN physics and mergers in the three cases lead respectively to a star-forming, temporarily-quenched and permanently-quenched galaxy. However the…
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