Density profile of dark matter haloes and galaxies in the Horizon-AGN simulation: the impact of AGN feedback
S. Peirani, Y. Dubois, M. Volonteri, J. Devriendt, K. Bundy, J. Silk,, C. Pichon, S. Kaviraj, R. Gavazzi, M. Habouzit

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to examine how AGN feedback influences the evolution of dark matter and galaxy density profiles over cosmic time, revealing complex, time-dependent effects.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of dark matter and galaxy density profiles in simulations with and without AGN feedback, highlighting the dynamic impact of AGN activity.
Findings
High-redshift halos have steeper density profiles without AGN feedback.
AGN feedback causes inner density profiles to flatten at intermediate redshifts.
At present day, AGN feedback leads to more cusped profiles and aligns stellar densities with observations.
Abstract
Using a suite of three large cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, Horizon-AGN, Horizon-noAGN (no AGN feedback) and Horizon-DM (no baryons), we investigate how a typical sub-grid model for AGN feedback affects the evolution of the inner density profiles of massive dark matter haloes and galaxies. Based on direct object-to-object comparisons, we find that the integrated inner mass and density slope differences between objects formed in these three simulations (hereafter, H_AGN, H_noAGN and H_DM) significantly evolve with time. More specifically, at high redshift (z~5), the mean central density profiles of H_AGN and H_noAGN dark matter haloes tend to be much steeper than their H_DM counterparts owing to the rapidly growing baryonic component and ensuing adiabatic contraction. By z~1.5, these mean halo density profiles in H_AGN have flattened, pummelled by powerful AGN activity ("quasar…
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