Supermassive black holes and their feedback effects in the IllustrisTNG simulation
Rainer Weinberger, Volker Springel, R\"udiger Pakmor, Dylan Nelson,, Shy Genel, Annalisa Pillepich, Mark Vogelsberger, Federico Marinacci, Jill, Naiman, Paul Torrey, Lars Hernquist

TL;DR
This paper investigates the role of supermassive black holes and their feedback mechanisms in galaxy evolution using the IllustrisTNG simulation, highlighting how different accretion modes influence galaxy quenching and black hole growth.
Contribution
It introduces a two-mode SMBH feedback model in the simulation, demonstrating its effects on galaxy quenching and black hole growth, aligning with observed relations.
Findings
Kinetic-mode feedback coincides with galaxy quenching.
Major mergers are not primary quenching triggers.
Black hole growth shifts from thermal to kinetic mode with mass.
Abstract
We study the population of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) and their effects on massive central galaxies in the IllustrisTNG cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation. The employed model for SMBH growth and feedback assumes a two-mode scenario in which the feedback from active galactic nuclei occurs through a kinetic, comparatively efficient mode at low accretion rates relative to the Eddington limit, and in the form of a thermal, less efficient mode at high accretion rates. We show that the quenching of massive central galaxies happens coincidently with kinetic-mode feedback, consistent with the notion that active supermassive black cause the low specific star formation rates observed in massive galaxies. However, major galaxy mergers are not responsible for initiating most of the quenching events in our model. Up to black hole masses of about $10^{8.5}\,{\rm…
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