The Radio Galaxy Population in the SIMBA SImulations
Nicole Thomas, Romeel Dave, Matt J. Jarvis, Daniel Angles-Alcazar

TL;DR
This paper uses the Simba cosmological simulation to study the properties and evolution of radio-loud active galactic nuclei, comparing simulated results with observations and exploring the demographics of different radio galaxy types.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed simulation-based analysis of radio galaxy populations, including distinctions between HERGs and LERGs, and compares predictions with observed radio luminosity functions.
Findings
Simba accurately reproduces observed radio luminosity functions.
Quiescent galaxies dominate high radio power sources, star-forming galaxies dominate lower powers.
LERGs are more numerous than HERGs, consistent with observations.
Abstract
We examine the 1.4GHz radio luminosities of galaxies arising from star formation and active galactic nuclei (AGN) within the state-of-the-art cosmological hydrodynamic simulation Simba. Simba grows black holes via gravitational torque limited accretion from cold gas and Bondi accretion from hot gas, and employs AGN feedback including jets at low Eddington ratios. We define a population of radio loud AGN (RLAGN) based on the presence of ongoing jet feedback. Within RLAGN we define high and low excitation radio galaxies (HERGs and LERGs) based on their dominant mode of black hole accretion: torque limited accretion representing feeding from a cold disk, or Bondi representing advection-dominated accretion from a hot medium. Simba predicts good agreement with the observed radio luminosity function (RLF) and its evolution, overall as well as separately for HERGs and LERGs. Quiescent galaxies…
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