# Simba: Cosmological Simulations with Black Hole Growth and Feedback

**Authors:** Romeel Dav\'e, Daniel Angl\'es-Alc\'azar, Desika Narayanan, Qi Li,, Mika H. Rafieferantsoa, Sarah Appleby

arXiv: 1901.10203 · 2019-04-10

## TL;DR

Simba is a advanced cosmological simulation that models galaxy formation, black hole growth, and feedback processes, successfully reproducing many observed galaxy properties and offering insights into galaxy evolution.

## Contribution

Introduces Simba, a new cosmological simulation with improved black hole growth and feedback models, including dust physics, enhancing the realism of galaxy formation predictions.

## Key findings

- Reproduces galaxy stellar mass functions from z=0 to 6
- Matches observed galaxy sizes and gas fractions
- Identifies jet feedback as key to quenching massive galaxies

## Abstract

We introduce the Simba simulations, the next generation of the Mufasa cosmological galaxy formation simulations run with Gizmo's meshless finite mass hydrodynamics. Simba includes updates to Mufasa's sub-resolution star formation and feedback prescriptions, and introduces black hole growth via the torque-limited accretion model of Angl\'es-Alc\'azar et al. (2017) from cold gas and Bondi accretion from hot gas, along with black hole feedback via kinetic bipolar outflows and X-ray energy. Ejection velocities are taken to be ~10^3 km/s at high Eddington ratios, increasing to ~8000 km/s at Eddington ratios below 2%, with a constant momentum input of 20L/c. Simba further includes an on-the-fly dust production, growth, and destruction model. Our Simba run with (100 Mpc/h)^3 and 1024^3 gas elements reproduces numerous observables, including galaxy stellar mass functions at z=0-6, the stellar mass--star formation rate main sequence, HI and H2 fractions, the mass-metallicity relation at z=0 and z=2, star-forming galaxy sizes, hot gas fractions in massive halos, and z=0 galaxy dust properties. However, Simba also yields an insufficiently sharp truncation of the z=0 mass function, and too-large sizes for low-mass quenched galaxies. We show that Simba's jet feedback is primarily responsible for quenching massive galaxies.

## Full text

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## Figures

30 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.10203/full.md

## References

165 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.10203/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.10203