1,943 research outputs found
The self-regulated AGN feedback loop: the role of chaotic cold accretion
Supermassive black hole accretion and feedback play central role in the
evolution of galaxies, groups, and clusters. I review how AGN feedback is
tightly coupled with the formation of multiphase gas and the newly probed
chaotic cold accretion (CCA). In a turbulent and heated atmosphere, cold clouds
and kpc-scale filaments condense out of the plasma via thermal instability and
rain toward the black hole. In the nucleus, the recurrent chaotic collisions
between the cold clouds, filaments, and central torus promote angular momentum
cancellation or mixing, boosting the accretion rate up to 100 times the Bondi
rate. The rapid variability triggers powerful AGN outflows, which quench the
cooling flow and star formation without destroying the cool core. The AGN
heating stifles the formation of multiphase gas and accretion, the feedback
subsides and the hot halo is allowed to cool again, restarting a new cycle.
Ultimately, CCA creates a symbiotic link between the black hole and the whole
host via a tight self-regulated feedback which preserves the gaseous halo in
global thermal equilibrium throughout cosmic time.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure; accepted for publication (IAUS 319
Chaotic cold accretion onto black holes
Using 3D AMR simulations, linking the 50 kpc to the sub-pc scales over the
course of 40 Myr, we systematically relax the classic Bondi assumptions in a
typical galaxy hosting a SMBH. In the realistic scenario, where the hot gas is
cooling, while heated and stirred on large scales, the accretion rate is
boosted up to two orders of magnitude compared with the Bondi prediction. The
cause is the nonlinear growth of thermal instabilities, leading to the
condensation of cold clouds and filaments when t_cool/t_ff < 10. Subsonic
turbulence of just over 100 km/s (M > 0.2) induces the formation of thermal
instabilities, even in the absence of heating, while in the transonic regime
turbulent dissipation inhibits their growth (t_turb/t_cool < 1). When heating
restores global thermodynamic balance, the formation of the multiphase medium
is violent, and the mode of accretion is fully cold and chaotic. The recurrent
collisions and tidal forces between clouds, filaments and the central clumpy
torus promote angular momentum cancellation, hence boosting accretion. On
sub-pc scales the clouds are channelled to the very centre via a funnel. A good
approximation to the accretion rate is the cooling rate, which can be used as
subgrid model, physically reproducing the boost factor of 100 required by
cosmological simulations, while accounting for fluctuations. Chaotic cold
accretion may be common in many systems, such as hot galactic halos, groups,
and clusters, generating high-velocity clouds and strong variations of the AGN
luminosity and jet orientation. In this mode, the black hole can quickly react
to the state of the entire host galaxy, leading to efficient self-regulated AGN
feedback and the symbiotic Magorrian relation. During phases of overheating,
the hot mode becomes the single channel of accretion (with a different cuspy
temperature profile), though strongly suppressed by turbulence.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS: added comments and references. Your feedback is
welcom
Chaotic cold accretion on to black holes in rotating atmospheres
Chaotic cold accretion (CCA) profoundly differs from classic black hole
accretion models. Using 3D high-resolution simulations, we probe the impact of
rotation on the hot and cold accretion flow in a typical massive galaxy. In the
hot mode, with or without turbulence, the pressure-dominated flow forms a
geometrically thick rotational barrier, suppressing the accretion rate to ~1/3
of the Bondi rate. When radiative cooling is dominant, the gas loses pressure
support and quickly circularizes in a cold thin disk. In the more common state
of a turbulent and heated atmosphere, CCA drives the dynamics if the gas
velocity dispersion exceeds the rotational velocity, i.e., turbulent Taylor
number < 1. Extended multiphase filaments condense out of the hot phase via
thermal instability and rain toward the black hole, boosting the accretion rate
up to 100 times the Bondi rate. Initially, turbulence broadens the angular
momentum distribution of the hot gas, allowing the cold phase to condense with
prograde or retrograde motion. Subsequent chaotic collisions between the cold
filaments, clouds, and a clumpy variable torus promote the cancellation of
angular momentum, leading to high accretion rates. The simulated sub-Eddington
accretion rates cover the range inferred from AGN cavity observations. CCA
predicts inner flat X-ray temperature and density profiles, as
recently discovered in M 87 and NGC 3115. The synthetic H{\alpha} images
reproduce the main features of cold gas observations in massive ellipticals, as
the line fluxes and the filaments versus disk morphology. Such dichotomy is key
for the long-term AGN feedback cycle. As gas cools, filamentary CCA develops
and boosts AGN heating; the cold mode is thus reduced and the rotating disk
remains the sole cold structure. Its consumption leaves the atmosphere in hot
mode with suppressed accretion and feedback, reloading the cycle.Comment: 18 pages, 21 figures, published in A&A; fully revised version with
new major results related to H{\alpha} and X-ray observation
The Impact of Radio AGN Bubble Composition on the Dynamics and Thermal Balance of the Intracluster Medium
Feeding and feedback of active galactic nuclei (AGN) are critical for
understanding the dynamics and thermodynamics of the intracluster medium (ICM)
within the cores of galaxy clusters. While radio bubbles inflated by AGN jets
could be dynamically supported by cosmic rays (CRs), the impact of CR-dominated
jets are not well understood. In this work, we perform three-dimensional
simulations of CR-jet feedback in an isolated cluster atmosphere; we find that
CR jets impact the multiphase gas differently than jets dominated by kinetic
energy. In particular, CR bubbles can more efficiently uplift the cluster gas
and cause an outward expansion of the hot ICM. Due to adiabatic cooling from
the expansion and less efficient heating from CR bubbles by direct mixing, the
ICM is more prone to local thermal instabilities, which will later enhance
chaotic cold accretion onto the AGN. The amount of cold gas formed during the
bubble formation and its late-time evolution sensitively depend on whether CR
transport processes are included or not. We also find that low-level, subsonic
driving of turbulence by AGN jets holds for both kinetic and CR jets;
nevertheless, the kinematics is consistent with the Hitomi measurements.
Finally, we carefully discuss the key observable signatures of each bubble
model, focusing on gamma-ray emission (and related comparison with Fermi), as
well as thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich constraints.Comment: accepted to Ap
Shaping the X-ray spectrum of galaxy clusters with AGN feedback and turbulence
The hot plasma filling galaxy clusters emits copious X-ray radiation. The
classic unheated and unperturbed cooling flow model predicts dramatic cooling
rates and an isobaric X-ray spectrum with constant differential luminosity
distribution. The observed cores of clusters (and groups) show instead a strong
deficit of soft X-ray emission: . Using 3D hydrodynamic simulations, we show that such
deficit arises from the tight self-regulation between thermal instability
condensation and AGN outflow injection: condensing clouds boost the AGN
outflows, which quench cooling as they thermalize through the core. The
resultant average distribution slope is , oscillating within
the observed . In the absence of thermal instability, the X-ray
spectrum remains isothermal (), while unopposed cooling drives a
too shallow slope, . AGN outflows deposit their energy inside-out,
releasing more heat in the inner cooler phase; radially distributed heating
alone induces a declining spectrum, . Turbulence further steepens
the spectrum and increases the scatter: the turbulent Mach number in the hot
phase is subsonic, while it becomes transonic in the cooler phase, making
perturbations to depart from the isobaric mode. Such increase in leads to . Self-regulated AGN outflow feedback can address
the soft X-ray problem through the interplay of heating and turbulence.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, published in MNRAS Letter
Revisiting the Cooling Flow Problem in Galaxies, Groups, and Clusters of Galaxies
We present a study of 107 galaxies, groups, and clusters spanning ~3 orders
of magnitude in mass, ~5 orders of magnitude in central galaxy star formation
rate (SFR), ~4 orders of magnitude in the classical cooling rate (dM/dt) of the
intracluster medium (ICM), and ~5 orders of magnitude in the central black hole
accretion rate. For each system in this sample, we measure dM/dt using archival
Chandra X-ray data and acquire the SFR and systematic uncertainty in the SFR by
combining over 330 estimates from dozens of literature sources. With these
data, we estimate the efficiency with which the ICM cools and forms stars,
finding e_cool = SFR/(dM/dt) = 1.4 +/- 0.4% for systems with dM/dt > 30
Msun/yr. For these systems, we measure a slope in the SFR-dM/dt relation
greater than unity, suggesting that the systems with the strongest cool cores
are also cooling more efficiently. We propose that this may be related to, on
average, higher black hole accretion rates in the strongest cool cores, which
could influence the total amount (saturating near the Eddington rate) and
dominant mode (mechanical vs radiative) of feedback. For systems with dM/dt <
30 Msun/yr, we find that the SFR and dM/dt are uncorrelated, and show that this
is consistent with star formation being fueled at a low (but dominant) level by
recycled ISM gas in these systems. We find an intrinsic log-normal scatter in
SFR at fixed dM/dt of 0.52 +/- 0.06 dex, suggesting that cooling is tightly
self-regulated over very long timescales, but can vary dramatically on short
timescales. There is weak evidence that this scatter may be related to the
feedback mechanism, with the scatter being minimized (~0.4 dex) in systems for
which the mechanical feedback power is within a factor of two of the cooling
luminosity.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, 6 tables. Submitted to ApJ. Comments welcome
The relation between gas density and velocity power spectra in galaxy clusters: high-resolution hydrodynamic simulations and the role of conduction
Exploring the ICM power spectrum can help us to probe the physics of galaxy
clusters. Using high-resolution 3D plasma simulations, we study the statistics
of the velocity field and its relation with the thermodynamic perturbations.
The normalization of the ICM spectrum (density, entropy, or pressure) is
linearly tied to the level of large-scale motions, which excite both gravity
and sound waves due to stratification. For low 3D Mach number M~0.25, gravity
waves mainly drive entropy perturbations, traced by preferentially tangential
turbulence. For M>0.5, sound waves start to significantly contribute, passing
the leading role to compressive pressure fluctuations, associated with
isotropic (or slightly radial) turbulence. Density and temperature fluctuations
are then characterized by the dominant process: isobaric (low M), adiabatic
(high M), or isothermal (strong conduction). Most clusters reside in the
intermediate regime, showing a mixture of gravity and sound waves, hence
drifting towards isotropic velocities. Remarkably, regardless of the regime,
the variance of density perturbations is comparable to the 1D Mach number. This
linear relation allows to easily convert between gas motions and ICM
perturbations, which can be exploited by Chandra, XMM data and by the
forthcoming Astro-H. At intermediate and small scales (10-100 kpc), the
turbulent velocities develop a Kolmogorov cascade. The thermodynamic
perturbations act as effective tracers of the velocity field, broadly
consistent with the Kolmogorov-Obukhov-Corrsin advection theory. Thermal
conduction acts to damp the gas fluctuations, washing out the filamentary
structures and steepening the spectrum, while leaving unaltered the velocity
cascade. The ratio of the velocity and density spectrum thus inverts the
downtrend shown by the non-diffusive models, allowing to probe the presence of
significant conductivity in the ICM.Comment: Accepted by A&A; 15 pages, 10 figures; added insights and references
- thank you for the positive feedbac
Unraveling baroclinicity in black hole weather storms
In the intracluster, intragroup, and circumgalactic medium (ICM, IGrM, CGM), turbulence plays a vital role in the self-regulated feedback and feeding cycle of central supermassive black holes (SMBHs). Here, we continue our systematic dissection of the turbulent 'weather' in high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations of feedback driven by active galactic nuclei (AGN). In non-barotropic and stratified atmospheres, baroclinicity is expected to generate fresh turbulence via misaligned gradients of density and pressure - such as in cyclonic storms on Earth. In this work, we dissect for the first time baroclinicity and its components in the astrophysical halo weather. Over the macro-scale galaxy cluster, baroclinicity tends to be dynamically subdominant for the enstrophy amplification. However, at and below the meso scale near the SMBH (r < 10 kpc; t < 20 Myr), baroclinicity is important to seed the initial enstrophy during active periods of AGN jet feedback. We find that baroclinicity shows stronger correlation with the density rather than pressure gradients. Despite the density-pressure gradient misalignment being often below 45°, their amplitudes boosted by mechanical AGN feedback are sufficient to enable key enstrophy/turbulence generation. Our study provides a novel step forward in understanding astrophysical atmospheres toward a unified BlackHoleWeather framework, akin to the complexity of Earth's weather
Dissecting the turbulent weather driven by mechanical AGN feedback
Turbulence in the intracluster, intragroup, and circumgalactic medium plays a
crucial role in the self-regulated feeding and feedback loop of central
supermassive black holes. We dissect the three-dimensional turbulent `weather'
in a high-resolution Eulerian simulation of active galactic nucleus (AGN)
feedback, shown to be consistent with multiple multi-wavelength observables of
massive galaxies. We carry out post-processing simulations of Lagrangian
tracers to track the evolution of enstrophy, a proxy of turbulence, and its
related sinks and sources. This allows us to isolate in depth the physical
processes that determine the evolution of turbulence during the recurring
strong and weak AGN feedback events, which repeat self-similarly over the Gyr
evolution. We find that the evolution of enstrophy/turbulence in the gaseous
halo is highly dynamic and variable over small temporal and spatial scales,
similar to the chaotic weather processes on Earth. We observe major
correlations between the enstrophy amplification and recurrent AGN activity,
especially via its kinetic power. While advective and baroclinc motions are
always sub-dominant, stretching motions are the key sources of the
amplification of enstrophy, in particular along the jet/cocoon, while
rarefactions decrease it throughout the bulk of the volume. This natural
self-regulation is able to preserve, as ensemble, the typically-observed
subsonic turbulence during cosmic time, superposed by recurrent spikes via
impulsive anisotropic AGN features (wide outflows, bubbles, cocoon shocks).
This study facilitates the preparation and interpretation of the
thermo-kinematical observations enabled by new revolutionary X-ray IFU
telescopes, such as XRISM and Athena.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures, published in MNRAS, we updated 4 figures, the
main results remain unaffecte
Linking Macro, Meso, and Micro Scales in Multiphase AGN Feeding and Feedback
Supermassive black hole (SMBH) feeding and feedback processes are often
considered as disjoint and studied independently at different scales, both in
observations and simulations. We encourage to adopt and unify three
physically-motivated scales for feeding and feedback (micro - meso - macro ~
mpc - kpc - Mpc), linking them in a tight multiphase self-regulated loop. We
pinpoint the key open questions related to this global SMBH unification
problem, while advocating for the extension of novel mechanisms best observed
in massive halos (such as chaotic cold accretion) down to low-mass systems. To
solve such challenges, we provide a set of recommendations that promote a
multiscale, multiwavelength, and interdisciplinary community.Comment: Published in Nature Astronomy (authors' version after final referee
iteration
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