Origin of the Golden Mass of Galaxies and Black Holes
Avishai Dekel, Sharon Lapiner, Yohan Dubois

TL;DR
This paper explores the physical mechanisms behind the characteristic mass scale of galaxies (~10^{12} solar masses) and its relation to black hole growth, linking galaxy evolution phases with feedback processes and cosmic epochs.
Contribution
It provides a coherent analytic and simulation-based model explaining how feedback mechanisms establish the golden mass and trigger galaxy and black hole evolution phases.
Findings
The golden mass arises from supernova feedback and virial shock heating.
Gaseous compaction into blue nuggets occurs at this mass, leading to quenching.
Black hole growth is triggered at the golden mass, initiating AGN feedback.
Abstract
We address the origin of the golden mass and time for galaxy formation and the onset of rapid black-hole growth. The preferred dark-halo mass of ~ is translated to a characteristic epoch, z~2, at which the typical forming halos have a comparable mass. We put together a coherent picture based on existing and new simple analytic modeling and cosmological simulations. We describe how the golden mass arises from two physical mechanisms that suppress gas supply and star formation below and above the golden mass, supernova feedback and virial shock heating of the circum-galactic medium (CGM), respectively. Cosmological simulations reveal that these mechanisms are responsible for a similar favored mass for the dramatic events of gaseous compaction into compact star-forming "blue nuggets", caused by mergers, counter-rotating streams or other mechanisms. This triggers inside-out…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
