The Effect of the AGN Feedback on the Interstellar Medium of Early-Type Galaxies: 2D Hydrodynamical Simulations of the Low-Rotation Case
L. Ciotti (1), S. Pellegrini (1), A. Negri (2), J.P. Ostriker (3,4) (1, University of Bologna, 2 CNRS - IAP, 3 Columbia University, 4 Princeton, University)

TL;DR
This study uses 2D hydrodynamical simulations to explore how AGN feedback influences the interstellar medium in early-type galaxies, revealing complex outflows, star formation feedback, and variable nuclear activity.
Contribution
It introduces detailed, physically consistent simulations of AGN feedback effects on early-type galaxies, including star formation, gas dynamics, and black hole growth.
Findings
Massive models sustain nuclear outbursts to present epoch.
AGN activity can positively influence star formation.
Gas expulsion and star formation are significantly affected by galaxy shape.
Abstract
We present 2D hydrodynamical simulations for the evolution of early-type galaxies containing central massive black holes (MBHs), starting at age 2 Gyr. The code contains accurate and physically consistent radiative and mechanical AGN wind feedback, with parsec-scale central resolution. Mass input comes from stellar evolution; energy input includes Type Ia and II supernova and stellar heating; star-formation is included. Realistic, axisymmetric dynamical models for the galaxies are built solving the Jeans' equations. The lowest mass models (Mstar = 8 10^{10}Msun) develop global outflows sustained by SNIa's heating, ending with a significantly lower amount of hot gas and new stars. In more massive models, nuclear outbursts last to the present epoch, with large and frequent fluctuations in nuclear emission and from the gas (Lx). Each burst last ~ 10^{7.5} yr, during which (for r < 2-3 kpc)…
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