The Noctua Suite of Simulations -- The Difficulty of Growing Massive Black Holes in Low-Mass Dwarf Galaxies
Jonathan Petersson, Michaela Hirschmann, Robin G. Tress, Marion Farcy, Simon C. O. Glover, Ralf S. Klessen, Thorsten Naab, Christian Partmann, David J. Whitworth

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to investigate how stellar feedback processes influence the growth of massive black holes in low-mass dwarf galaxies, revealing complex interactions that can both suppress and enhance black hole accretion.
Contribution
It introduces a novel simulation framework that models stellar feedback and gas accretion with detailed physics, providing new insights into black hole growth in dwarf galaxies.
Findings
ISR feedback can increase black hole growth by suppressing star formation.
SNII feedback episodically suppresses gas accretion onto the black hole.
Combined feedback results in moderated black hole growth compared to no feedback.
Abstract
Aims. We study the individual and cumulative impact of stellar feedback processes on massive black hole (MBH) growth in a simulated low-mass dwarf galaxy. Methods. A suite of high-resolution radiation-hydrodynamic simulations called Noctua is performed, using the ArepoNoctua numerical framework for BHs in galaxy simulations. The chemical evolution of the gas is explicitly modelled in a time-dependent non-equilibrium way. Two types of stellar feedback are considered: individually-traced type II supernova (SNII) explosions, and radiatively transferred (on-the-fly) ionising stellar radiation (ISR) from OB stars. As part of the numerical framework, we develop and apply a novel physically-motivated model for MBH gas accretion, taking into account the angular momentum of the gas in the radiatively efficient regime, to estimate the gas accretion rate from the sub-grid accretion disc. Results.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
