Blowing cold flows away: the impact of early AGN activity on the formation of a brightest cluster galaxy progenitor

(2012)

Authors:

Yohan Dubois, Christophe Pichon, Julien Devriendt, Joseph Silk, Martin Haehnelt, Taysun Kimm, Adrianne Slyz

Blowing cold flows away: the impact of early AGN activity on the formation of a brightest cluster galaxy progenitor

ArXiv 1206.5838 (2012)

Authors:

Yohan Dubois, Christophe Pichon, Julien Devriendt, Joseph Silk, Martin Haehnelt, Taysun Kimm, Adrianne Slyz

Abstract:

Supermassive black holes (BH) are powerful sources of energy that are already in place at very early epochs of the Universe (by z=6). Using hydrodynamical simulations of the formation of a massive M_vir=5 10^11 M_sun halo by z=6 (the most massive progenitor of a cluster of M_vir=2 10^15 M_sun at z=0), we evaluate the impact of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) on galaxy mass content, BH self-regulation, and gas distribution inside this massive halo. We find that SN feedback has a marginal influence on the stellar structure, and no influence on the mass distribution on large scales. In contrast, AGN feedback alone is able to significantly alter the stellar-bulge mass content by quenching star formation when the BH is self-regulating, and by depleting the cold gas reservoir in the centre of the galaxy. The growth of the BH proceeds first by a rapid Eddington-limited period fed by direct cold filamentary infall. When the energy delivered by the AGN is sufficiently large to unbind the cold gas of the bulge, the accretion of gas onto the BH is maintained both by smooth gas inflow and clump migration through the galactic disc triggered by merger-induced torques. The feedback from the AGN has also a severe consequence on the baryon mass content within the halo, producing large-scale hot superwinds, able to blow away some of the cold filamentary material from the centre and reduce the baryon fraction by more than 30 per cent within the halo's virial radius. Thus in the very young universe, AGN feedback is likely to be a key process, shaping the properties of the most massive galaxies.

Parameter estimation for inspiraling eccentric compact binaries including pericenter precession

(2012)

Authors:

Balázs Mikóczi, Bence Kocsis, Péter Forgács, Mátyás Vasúth

Resonant Post-Newtonian Eccentricity Excitation in Hierarchical Three-body Systems

(2012)

Authors:

Smadar Naoz, Bence Kocsis, Abraham Loeb, Nicolas Yunes

The Spitzer Extragalactic Representative Volume Survey (SERVS): survey definition and goals

ArXiv 1206.406 (2012)

Authors:

J-C Mauduit, M Lacy, D Farrah, JA Surace, M Jarvis, S Oliver, C Maraston, M Vaccari, L Marchetti, G Zeimann, EA Gonzalez-Solares, J Pforr, AO Petric, B Henriques, PA Thomas, J Afonso, A Rettura, G Wilson, JT Falder, JE Geach, M Huynh, RP Norris, N Seymour, GT Richards, SA Stanford, DM Alexander, RH Becker, PN Best, L Bizzocchi, D Bonfield, N Castro, A Cava, S Chapman, N Christopher, DL Clements, G Covone, N Dubois, JS Dunlop, E Dyke, A Edge, HC Ferguson, S Foucaud, A Franceschini, RR Gal, JK Grant, M Grossi, E Hatziminaoglou, S Hickey, JA Hodge, J-S Huang, RJ Ivison, M Kim, O LeFevre, M Lehnert, CJ Lonsdale, LM Lubin, RJ McLure, H Messias, A Martinez-Sansigre, AMJ Mortier, DM Nielsen, M Ouchi, G Parish, I Perez-Fournon, M Pierre, S Rawlings, A Readhead, SE Ridgway, D Rigopoulou, AK Romer, IG Rosebloom, HJA Rottgering, M Rowan-Robinson, A Sajina, CJ Simpson, I Smail, GK Squires, JA Stevens, R Taylor, M Trichas, T Urrutia, E van Kampen, A Verma, CK Xu

Abstract:

We present the Spitzer Extragalactic Representative Volume Survey (SERVS), an 18 square degrees medium-deep survey at 3.6 and 4.5 microns with the post-cryogenic Spitzer Space Telescope to ~2 microJy (AB=23.1) depth of five highly observed astronomical fields (ELAIS-N1, ELAIS-S1, Lockman Hole, Chandra Deep Field South and XMM-LSS). SERVS is designed to enable the study of galaxy evolution as a function of environment from z~5 to the present day, and is the first extragalactic survey both large enough and deep enough to put rare objects such as luminous quasars and galaxy clusters at z>1 into their cosmological context. SERVS is designed to overlap with several key surveys at optical, near- through far-infrared, submillimeter and radio wavelengths to provide an unprecedented view of the formation and evolution of massive galaxies. In this paper, we discuss the SERVS survey design, the data processing flow from image reduction and mosaicing to catalogs, as well as coverage of ancillary data from other surveys in the SERVS fields. We also highlight a variety of early science results from the survey.