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Quasar Feedback: The Missing Link in Structure Formation

288

Citations

160

References

2004

Year

Abstract

We consider the impact of quasar outflows on structure formation. Such outflows are potentially more important than galactic winds, which appear insufficient to produce the level of preheating inferred from X-ray observations of galaxy clusters. Using a simple analytical model for the distribution of quasars with redshift, coupled with a one-dimensional Sedov-Taylor model for outflows, we are able to make robust statements about their impact of on structure formation. As large regions of the IGM are heated above a critical entropy of approximately 100 keV cm^2, cooling become impossible within them, regardless of changes in density. On quasar scales, this has the effect of inhibiting further formation, resulting in the observed fall-off in their number densities below z = 2. On galaxy scales, quasar feedback fixes the turn-over scale in the galaxy luminosity function (L_*) as the nonlinear scale at the redshift of strong feedback. The galaxy luminosity function then remains largely fixed after this epoch, consistent with recent observations and in contrast to the strong evolution predicted in more standard galaxy-formation models. Finally, strong quasar feedback explains why the intracluster medium is observed to have been pre-heated to entropy levels just above S_crit, the minimum excess that would not have been erased by cooling. The presence of such outflows is completely consistent with the observed properties of the Lyman-alpha forest at z ~ 2, but is expected to have a substantial and detectable impact on Compton distortions observed in the microwave background and the multiphase properties of the "warm-hot" (z=0) circumgalactic medium.

References

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