Dissecting the turbulent weather driven by mechanical AGN feedback
D. Wittor, M. Gaspari

TL;DR
This paper investigates the complex turbulent weather driven by AGN feedback in galaxy halos, revealing the physical processes that sustain subsonic turbulence and its variability, with implications for future X-ray observations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of turbulence evolution during AGN feedback cycles using high-resolution simulations and post-processing tracers, highlighting the role of stretching motions in turbulence amplification.
Findings
Enstrophy evolution is highly dynamic and correlates with AGN activity.
Stretching motions are the primary source of enstrophy amplification.
Self-regulation maintains subsonic turbulence over cosmic time.
Abstract
Turbulence in the intracluster, intragroup, and circumgalactic medium plays a crucial role in the self-regulated feeding and feedback loop of central supermassive black holes. We dissect the three-dimensional turbulent `weather' in a high-resolution Eulerian simulation of active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback, shown to be consistent with multiple multi-wavelength observables of massive galaxies. We carry out post-processing simulations of Lagrangian tracers to track the evolution of enstrophy, a proxy of turbulence, and its related sinks and sources. This allows us to isolate in depth the physical processes that determine the evolution of turbulence during the recurring strong and weak AGN feedback events, which repeat self-similarly over the Gyr evolution. We find that the evolution of enstrophy/turbulence in the gaseous halo is highly dynamic and variable over small temporal and…
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