Quenching star formation with quasar outflows launched by trapped IR radiation
Tiago Costa (Leiden Observatory), Joakim Rosdahl (CRAL, Leiden, Observatory), Debora Sijacki (IoA/KICC), Martin G. Haehnelt (IoA/KICC)

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to show that infrared radiation pressure from quasars can launch powerful, short-lived outflows that effectively suppress star formation in galaxy bulges, highlighting a key feedback mechanism.
Contribution
It demonstrates that IR multi-scattering radiation pressure can drive galactic outflows at realistic black hole luminosities, significantly impacting galaxy evolution models.
Findings
IR radiation pressure can launch high-velocity outflows at realistic quasar luminosities.
Outflows are multi-phase, predominantly cool, and short-lived (<10 Myr).
Radiation pressure effectively suppresses star formation in galaxy bulges.
Abstract
We present cosmological radiation-hydrodynamic simulations, performed with the code Ramses-RT, of radiatively-driven outflows in a massive quasar host halo at . Our simulations include both single- and multi-scattered radiation pressure on dust from a quasar and are compared against simulations performed with thermal feedback. For radiation pressure-driving, we show that there is a critical quasar luminosity above which a galactic outflow is launched, set by the equilibrium of gravitational and radiation forces. While this critical luminosity is unrealistically high in the single-scattering limit for plausible black hole masses, it is in line with a black hole accreting at its Eddington limit, if infrared (IR) multi-scattering radiation pressure is included. The outflows are fast () and strongly…
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