# The relationship between black hole mass and galaxy properties:   Examining the black hole feedback model in IllustrisTNG

**Authors:** Bryan A. Terrazas, Eric F. Bell, Annalisa Pillepich, Dylan Nelson,, Rachel S. Somerville, Shy Genel, Rainer Weinberger, M\'elanie Habouzit, Yuan, Li, Lars Hernquist, and Mark Vogelsberger

arXiv: 1906.02747 · 2020-02-26

## TL;DR

This study uses the IllustrisTNG simulation to investigate how black hole feedback influences galaxy quiescence, revealing a threshold black hole mass that correlates with a sharp decline in star formation.

## Contribution

It demonstrates the sensitivity of galaxy quiescence to black hole feedback physics and compares simulation results with observational data, highlighting key differences.

## Key findings

- Black hole kinetic winds suppress star formation at a specific M_BH threshold.
- Quiescent galaxy fraction depends on the M_BH-M_star relation and threshold.
- Simulations reproduce the trend that quiescent galaxies host more massive black holes.

## Abstract

Supermassive black hole feedback is thought to be responsible for the lack of star formation, or quiescence, in a significant fraction of galaxies. We explore how observable correlations between the specific star formation rate (sSFR), stellar mass (M$_{\rm{star}}$), and black hole mass (M$_{\rm{BH}}$) are sensitive to the physics of black hole feedback in a galaxy formation model. We use the IllustrisTNG simulation suite, specifically the TNG100 simulation and ten model variations that alter the parameters of the black hole model. Focusing on central galaxies at $z = 0$ with M$_{\rm{star}} > 10^{10}$ M$_{\odot}$, we find that the sSFR of galaxies in IllustrisTNG decreases once the energy from black hole kinetic winds at low accretion rates becomes larger than the gravitational binding energy of gas within the galaxy stellar radius. This occurs at a particular M$_{\rm{BH}}$ threshold above which galaxies are found to sharply transition from being mostly star-forming to mostly quiescent. As a result of this behavior, the fraction of quiescent galaxies as a function of M$_{\rm{star}}$ is sensitive to both the normalization of the M$_{\rm{BH}}$-M$_{\rm{star}}$ relation and the M$_{\rm{BH}}$ threshold for quiescence in IllustrisTNG. Finally, we compare these model results to observations of 91 central galaxies with dynamical M$_{\rm{BH}}$ measurements with the caveat that this sample is not representative of the whole galaxy population. While IllustrisTNG reproduces the observed trend that quiescent galaxies host more massive black holes, the observations exhibit a broader scatter in M$_{\rm{BH}}$ at a given M$_{\rm{star}}$ and show a smoother decline in sSFR with M$_{\rm{BH}}$.

## Full text

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## Figures

13 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.02747/full.md

## References

153 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.02747/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.02747