The role of AGN on the structure, kinematics and evolution of ETGs in the Horizon simulations
M. S. Rosito, S. E. Pedrosa, P. B. Tissera, N. E. Chisari, R., Dominguez-Tenreiro, Y. Dubois, S. Peirani, J. Devriendt, C. Pichon, A. Slyz

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore how active galactic nuclei (AGN) feedback influences the structural, kinematic, and evolutionary properties of early-type galaxies, aligning simulation results with observed galaxy scaling relations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of AGN feedback effects on ETG evolution using Horizon-AGN simulations, highlighting its role in reproducing observed galaxy properties.
Findings
AGN feedback is essential for matching observed galaxy scaling relations.
It influences galaxy size, stellar age, and rotational features.
Simulations with AGN reproduce observed bimodality in galaxy spin parameters.
Abstract
Feedback processes play a fundamental role in the regulation of the star formation (SF) activity in galaxies and, in particular, in the quenching of early-type galaxies (ETGs) as has been inferred by observational and numerical studies of Lambda CDM models. At z = 0, ETGs exhibit well-known fundamental scaling relations, but the connection between them and the physical processes shaping ETG evolution remains unknown.This work aims at studying the impact of the energetic feedback due to active galactic nuclei (AGN) on the formation and evolution of ETGs.We focus on assessing the impact of AGN feedback on the evolution of the mass-plane and the fundamental plane (FP, defined by using mass surface density) as well as on morphology, kinematics, and stellar age across the FP.The Horizon-AGN and Horizon-noAGN cosmological hydrodynamical simulations were performed with identical initial…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
