Bibcode
McCarthy, I. G.; Schaye, J.; Bower, R. G.; Ponman, T. J.; Booth, C. M.; Dalla Vecchia, C.; Springel, V.
Referencia bibliográfica
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 412, Issue 3, pp. 1965-1984.
Fecha de publicación:
4
2011
Número de citas
190
Número de citas referidas
181
Descripción
Galaxy groups are not scaled down versions of massive galaxy clusters -
the hot gas in groups [known as the intragroup medium (IGrM)] is, on
average, less dense than the intracluster medium, implying that one or
more non-gravitational processes (e.g. radiative cooling, star formation
and/or feedback) has had a relatively larger effect on groups. In the
present study, we compare a number of cosmological hydrodynamic
simulations that form part of the OverWhelmingly Large Simulations
project to isolate and quantify the effects of cooling and feedback from
supernovae (SNe) and active galactic nuclei (AGN) on the gas. This is
achieved by comparing Lagrangian thermal histories of the gas in the
different runs, which were all started from identical initial
conditions. While radiative cooling, star formation and SN feedback are
all necessary ingredients, only runs that also include AGN feedback are
able to successfully reproduce the optical and X-ray properties of
groups and low-mass clusters. We isolate how, when and exactly what gas
is heated by AGN. Interestingly, we find that the gas that constitutes
the present-day IGrM is that which was not strongly heated by AGN.
Instead, the low median density/high median entropy of the gas in
present-day groups is achieved by the ejection of lower entropy gas from
low-mass progenitor galaxies at high redshift (primarily 2 ≲z≲
4). This corresponds to the epoch when supermassive black holes accreted
most of their mass, typically at a rate that is close to the Eddington
limit (i.e. when the black holes are in a 'quasar mode').