The Pandora project – II. How non-thermal physics drives bursty star formation and temperate mass-loaded outflows in dwarf galaxies
Abstract:
Dwarf galaxies provide powerful laboratories for studying galaxy formation physics. Their early assembly, shallow gravitational potentials, and bursty, clustered star formation histories make them especially sensitive to the processes that regulate baryons through multiphase outflows. Using high-resolution, cosmological zoom-in simulations of a dwarf galaxy from the Pandora suite, we explore the impact of stellar radiation, magnetic fields, and cosmic ray feedback on star formation, outflows, and metal retention. We find that our purely hydrodynamical model without non-thermal physics – in which supernova feedback is boosted to reproduce realistic stellar mass assembly – drives violent, overly enriched outflows that suppress the metal content of the host galaxy. Including radiation reduces the clustering of star formation and weakens feedback. However, the additional incorporation of cosmic rays produces fast, mass-loaded, multiphase outflows consisting of both ionized and neutral gas components, in better agreement with observations. These outflows, which entrain a denser, more temperate interstellar medium, exhibit broad metallicity distributions while preserving metals within the galaxy. Furthermore, the star formation history becomes more bursty, in agreement with recent James Webb Space Telescope findings. These results highlight the essential role of non-thermal physics in galaxy evolution and the need to incorporate it in future galaxy formation models.On the rapid growth of SMBHs in high-z galaxies: the aftermath of Population III.1 stars
Abstract:
Abstract Despite the vast amount of energy released by active galactic nuclei (AGN), their role in early galaxy formation and in regulating the growth of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) remains poorly understood. Through new high-resolution zoom-in cosmological simulations, we follow the co-evolution of 105 M⊙ black hole seeds with their host dwarf galaxy. We model ionizing feedback from a Pop III.1 progenitor, applicable to a wide range of internally or externally irradiated SMBH formation scenarios. The simulated suite progressively spans physics ranging from no AGN feedback to more complex setups including thermal, kinetic and radiative feedback – explored for both low and enhanced AGN power. Across all our models, we find that black hole seeds efficiently reach masses of ∼107 M⊙ within a ∼1010 M⊙ halo by z = 8. Although they exhibit notably different mass growth histories, these latter seem unimpeded by the presence of AGN feedback. The simulation including radiative feedback is the most distinct, with super-Eddington episodes driving fast and mass-loaded gas outflows (exceeding 2500 km s−1) up to ∼50 kpc, along with minor stellar mass suppression in the host galaxy. Our measurements are in broad agreement with moderate luminosity quasars recently observed by JWST, producing overmassive black holes (SMBH-to-galaxy mass ratios 0.01 − 1), dynamical masses of ∼109.5 M⊙, stellar masses of ∼108.5 M⊙, and high, though short-lived, Eddington fraction accretion rates. These results advocate for a scenario where AGN feedback allows for rapid SMBH growth during the reionisation era, while driving winds that extend deep into the intergalactic medium – shaping host galaxies as well as more distant surroundings.The emergence and ionizing feedback of Pop III.1 stars as progenitors for supermassive black holes
Abstract:
Recent observations by James Webb Space Telescope reveal an unexpectedly abundant population of rapidly growing supermassive black holes (SMBHs) in the early Universe, underscoring the need for improved models for their origin and growth. Employing new full radiative transfer hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation, we investigate the local and intergalactic feedback of SMBH progenitors for the Population III.1 (Pop III.1) scenario, i.e. efficient formation of supermassive stars from pristine, undisturbed dark matter minihaloes. Our cosmological simulations capture the R-type expansion phase of these Pop III.1 stars, with their H-ionizing photon luminosities of generating H ii regions that extend deep into the intergalactic medium, reaching comoving radii of . We vary both the Pop III.1 ionization flux and cosmological formation environments, finding the former regulates their final , whereas the latter is more important in setting their formation redshift. We use the results from our radiation-hydrodynamics simulations to estimate the cosmic number density of SMBHs, , expected from Pop III.1 progenitors. We find , consistent with the results inferred from recent observations of the local and high-redshift universe. Overall, this establishes Pop III.1 progenitors as viable candidates for the formation of the first SMBH, and emphasizes the importance of exploring heavy mass seed scenarios.Dwarf galaxies as a probe of a primordially magnetized Universe
Abstract:
Aims: The true nature of primordial magnetic fields (PMFs) and their role in the formation of galaxies still remains elusive. To shed light on these unknowns, we investigate their impact by varying two sets of properties: (i) accounting for the effect of PMFs on the initial matter power spectrum, and (ii) accounting for their magneto-hydrodynamical effects on the formation of galaxies. By comparing both we can determine the dominant agent in shaping galaxy evolution.
Methods: We use the magneto-hydrodynamics code RAMSES, to generate multiple new zoom-in simulations for eight different host halos of dwarf galaxies across a wide luminosity range of 103 − 106 L⊙. These halos are selected from a ΛCDM cosmological box, tracking their evolution down to redshift z = 0. We explore a variety of primordial magnetic field (comoving) strengths Bλ ranging from 0.05 to 0.50 nG.
Results: We find magnetic fields in the interstellar medium not only modify star formation in dwarf spheroidal galaxies but also completely prevent the formation of stars in less compact ultra-faints with halo mass and stellar mass below ∼ 2.5 · 109 and 3 · 106 M⊙, respectively. At high redshifts, the impact of PMFs on host halos of dwarf galaxies through the modification of the matter power spectrum is more dominant than the influence of magneto-hydrodynamics in shaping their gaseous structure. Through the amplification of small perturbations ranging in mass from 107 to 109 M⊙ in the ΛCDM+PMFs matter power spectrum, primordial fields expedite the formation of the first dark matter halos, leading to an earlier onset and a higher star formation rate at redshifts z > 12. We investigate the evolution of various energy components and demonstrate that magnetic fields with an initial strength of Bλ ≥ 0.05 nG exhibit a strong growth of magnetic energy, accompanied by a saturation phase, that starts quickly after the growth phase. These trends persist consistently, regardless of the initial conditions, whether it is the classical ΛCDM or modified by PMFs. Lastly, we investigate the impact of PMFs on the present-time observable properties of dwarf galaxies, namely, the half light radius, V-band luminosity, mean metallicity and velocity dispersion profile. We find that PMFs with moderate strengths of Bλ ≤ 0.10 nG show great agreement with the scaling relations of the observed Local group dwarfs. However, stronger fields lead to large sizes and high velocity dispersion.