Unraveling Jet Quenching Criteria Across L* Galaxies and Massive Cluster Ellipticals
Kung-Yi Su, Greg L. Bryan, Christopher C. Hayward, Rachel S., Somerville, Philip F. Hopkins, Razieh Emami, Claude-Andr\'e, Faucher-Gigu\`ere, Eliot Quataert, Sam B. Ponnada, Drummond Fielding,, Du\v{s}an Kere\v{s}

TL;DR
This study investigates different jet heating models to suppress cooling flows in massive galaxies and clusters, confirming the effectiveness of energy scaling based on free-fall energy and highlighting cosmic ray jets as particularly effective.
Contribution
It extends previous jet criteria to a wider halo mass range and compares multiple jet modes using high-resolution MHD simulations.
Findings
Scaling jet energy with free-fall energy effectively suppresses cooling flows.
CR-dominant jets are most effective across all halo masses.
Alternative cooling-based energy scaling can overestimate jet flux requirements.
Abstract
In the absence of supplementary heat, the radiative cooling of halo gas around massive galaxies (Milky Way mass and above) leads to an excess of cold gas or stars beyond observed levels. AGN jet-induced heating is likely essential, but the specific properties of the jets remain unclear. Our previous work (Su et al. 2021) concludes from simulations of a halo with that a successful jet model should have an energy flux comparable to the free-fall energy flux at the cooling radius and should inflate a sufficiently wide cocoon with a long enough cooling time. In this paper, we investigate three jet modes with constant fluxes satisfying the criteria, including high-temperature thermal jets, cosmic ray (CR)-dominant jets, and widely precessing kinetic jets in halos using high-resolution, non-cosmological MHD simulations with the FIRE-2…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
