Bringing faint active galactic nuclei (AGNs) to light: a view from large-scale cosmological simulations
Adrian P. Schirra, Melanie Habouzit, Ralf S. Klessen, Francesca, Fornasini, Dylan Nelson, Annalisa Pillepich, Daniel Angl\'es-Alc\'azar,, Romeel Dav\'e, Francesca Civano

TL;DR
This study uses large-scale cosmological simulations to explore the properties of faint active galactic nuclei (AGNs), their host galaxies, and how future X-ray observations can distinguish between different galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It compares faint AGN populations across multiple simulations and models their X-ray emission, providing insights for future observational discrimination of galaxy formation theories.
Findings
Faint AGNs are hosted by different galaxy types depending on the simulation.
Simulations tend to overestimate X-ray luminosity compared to observations.
Differences in AGN properties can help discriminate galaxy formation models.
Abstract
The sensitivity of X-ray facilities and our ability to detect fainter active galactic nuclei (AGNs) will increase with the upcoming Athena mission and the AXIS and Lynx concept missions, thus improving our understanding of supermassive black holes (BHs) in a luminosity regime that can be dominated by X-ray binaries. We analyze the population of faint AGN (L_x (2-10 keV) < 10^42 erg/s) in the Illustris, TNG100, EAGLE, and SIMBA cosmological simulations, and find that the properties of their host galaxies vary from one simulation to another. In Illustris and EAGLE, faint AGN are powered by low-mass BHs located in low-mass star-forming galaxies. In TNG100 and SIMBA, they are mostly associated with more massive BHs in quenched massive galaxies. We model the X-ray binary populations (XRB) of the simulated galaxies, and find that AGN often dominate the galaxy AGN+XRB hard X-ray luminosity at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
