Evidence for non-merger co-evolution of galaxies and their supermassive black holes
R. J. Smethurst, R. S. Beckmann, B. D. Simmons, A. Coil, J. Devriendt,, Y. Dubois, I. L. Garland, C. J. Lintott, G. Martin, S. Peirani

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to demonstrate that the correlation between supermassive black holes and their host galaxies exists even without galaxy mergers, highlighting secular processes and radio-mode feedback as key drivers of co-evolution.
Contribution
It provides evidence that galaxy-SMBH co-evolution occurs independently of mergers, emphasizing secular processes and feedback mechanisms using simulated data.
Findings
Correlations between SMBH mass and galaxy properties persist without mergers.
Merger-free systems show broader scatter in scaling relations.
Radio-mode feedback dominates co-evolution in merger-free galaxies.
Abstract
Recent observational and theoretical studies have suggested that supermassive black holes (SMBHs) grow mostly through non-merger (`secular') processes. Since galaxy mergers lead to dynamical bulge growth, the only way to observationally isolate non-merger growth is to study galaxies with low bulge-to-total mass ratio (e.g. B/T < 10%). However, bulge growth can also occur due to secular processes, such as disk instabilities, making disk-dominated selections a somewhat incomplete way to select merger-free systems. Here we use the Horizon-AGN simulation to select simulated galaxies which have not undergone a merger since z = 2, regardless of bulge mass, and investigate their location on typical black hole-galaxy scaling relations in comparison to galaxies with merger dominated histories. While the existence of these correlations has long been interpreted as co-evolution of galaxies and…
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