The evolution of black holes in cosmological simulations

We investigate the growth of black holes and their effects on the evolution of galaxies through cosmic time in the ΛCDM cosmology by using fully hydrodynamical simulations of structure formation. Gas accretion onto black holes is modelled and improved via a subgrid model that takes into account the...

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Main Author: Rosas-Guevara, Yetli Mariana
Published: Durham University 2014
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530
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.630041
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6300412016-08-04T03:45:33ZThe evolution of black holes in cosmological simulationsRosas-Guevara, Yetli Mariana2014We investigate the growth of black holes and their effects on the evolution of galaxies through cosmic time in the ΛCDM cosmology by using fully hydrodynamical simulations of structure formation. Gas accretion onto black holes is modelled and improved via a subgrid model that takes into account the circularisation and subsequent viscous transport of infalling material. We incorporate the black hole accretion model in hydrodynamical simulations of relatively small size. The model broadly matches the observed stellar mass fractions in haloes and reproduces the expected correlation between the stellar velocity dispersion and the black hole mass. The distribution of black hole accretion rates is also compatible with observations. Additionally, we use a state-of-the-art hydrodynamic simulation that is designed to produce a virtual Universe that closely matches the observed properties of galaxies such as the galaxy stellar mass function and the relation between the black hole mass and the stellar mass at the present day. The critical part to reproduce the galaxy stellar mass function is the subgrid models of AGN feedback and black hole growth that are based on the model investigated above. We find that the simulation reproduces the black hole mass function at the present day. We investigate the predicted relations between the black hole mass and the stellar mass and the black hole mass and the parent halo mass and their evolution through cosmic time. We find that there is no evolution in approximately the last 10 and a half Giga years (z < 2), while at early times the most massive galaxies were inhabited by more massive black holes. The evolution of these relations are different in large halos and small halos. This can be explained in terms of self-regulation. Black holes living in massive haloes (< 10^12 M ) today self-regulate their growth via AGN feedback that quenches black hole accretion rates and star formation, while the black holes in small haloes rapidly grow without affecting the growth of the galaxy. By looking at the relations between the gas properties and the parent halo mass, we compare the scatter of these relations to the ratio of cumulative accreted mass of black holes to halo mass. We speculate that there is a range of halos that frames the region where black holes start to grow by self-regulation. Finally, we explore the predicted evolution of the AGN luminosity functions in X-ray bands predicted in this simulation. We find remarkable agreement with observations. In addition, we find that the observed downsizing effect of AGNs is well reproduced in the simulation as a natural consequence of reproducing the AGN luminosity functions. We also explore AGN activity in different halos. We find that the massive haloes are inhabited by AGNs with low or non activity while low mass haloes are inhabited by AGNs with high activity that contribute to the hard X ray luminosity function across time.530Durham Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.630041http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/10782/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 530
spellingShingle 530
Rosas-Guevara, Yetli Mariana
The evolution of black holes in cosmological simulations
description We investigate the growth of black holes and their effects on the evolution of galaxies through cosmic time in the ΛCDM cosmology by using fully hydrodynamical simulations of structure formation. Gas accretion onto black holes is modelled and improved via a subgrid model that takes into account the circularisation and subsequent viscous transport of infalling material. We incorporate the black hole accretion model in hydrodynamical simulations of relatively small size. The model broadly matches the observed stellar mass fractions in haloes and reproduces the expected correlation between the stellar velocity dispersion and the black hole mass. The distribution of black hole accretion rates is also compatible with observations. Additionally, we use a state-of-the-art hydrodynamic simulation that is designed to produce a virtual Universe that closely matches the observed properties of galaxies such as the galaxy stellar mass function and the relation between the black hole mass and the stellar mass at the present day. The critical part to reproduce the galaxy stellar mass function is the subgrid models of AGN feedback and black hole growth that are based on the model investigated above. We find that the simulation reproduces the black hole mass function at the present day. We investigate the predicted relations between the black hole mass and the stellar mass and the black hole mass and the parent halo mass and their evolution through cosmic time. We find that there is no evolution in approximately the last 10 and a half Giga years (z < 2), while at early times the most massive galaxies were inhabited by more massive black holes. The evolution of these relations are different in large halos and small halos. This can be explained in terms of self-regulation. Black holes living in massive haloes (< 10^12 M ) today self-regulate their growth via AGN feedback that quenches black hole accretion rates and star formation, while the black holes in small haloes rapidly grow without affecting the growth of the galaxy. By looking at the relations between the gas properties and the parent halo mass, we compare the scatter of these relations to the ratio of cumulative accreted mass of black holes to halo mass. We speculate that there is a range of halos that frames the region where black holes start to grow by self-regulation. Finally, we explore the predicted evolution of the AGN luminosity functions in X-ray bands predicted in this simulation. We find remarkable agreement with observations. In addition, we find that the observed downsizing effect of AGNs is well reproduced in the simulation as a natural consequence of reproducing the AGN luminosity functions. We also explore AGN activity in different halos. We find that the massive haloes are inhabited by AGNs with low or non activity while low mass haloes are inhabited by AGNs with high activity that contribute to the hard X ray luminosity function across time.
author Rosas-Guevara, Yetli Mariana
author_facet Rosas-Guevara, Yetli Mariana
author_sort Rosas-Guevara, Yetli Mariana
title The evolution of black holes in cosmological simulations
title_short The evolution of black holes in cosmological simulations
title_full The evolution of black holes in cosmological simulations
title_fullStr The evolution of black holes in cosmological simulations
title_full_unstemmed The evolution of black holes in cosmological simulations
title_sort evolution of black holes in cosmological simulations
publisher Durham University
publishDate 2014
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.630041
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