Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

Feedback reshapes the baryon distribution within haloes, in halo outskirts, and beyond: the closure radius from dwarfs to massive clusters

Published 14 Nov 2022 in astro-ph.GA and astro-ph.CO | (2211.07659v1)

Abstract: We explore three sets of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, IllustrisTNG, EAGLE, and SIMBA, to investigate the physical processes impacting the distribution of baryons in and around haloes across an unprecedented mass range of $108<M_{\rm 200c}/{\rm M_{\odot}}<10{15}$, from the halo centre out to scales as large as $30\,R_{\rm 200c}$. We demonstrate that baryonic feedback mechanisms significantly redistribute gas, lowering the baryon fractions inside haloes while simultaneously accumulating this material outside the virial radius. To understand this large-scale baryonic redistribution and identify the dominant physical processes responsible, we examine several variants of TNG that selectively exclude stellar and AGN feedback, cooling, and radiation. We find that heating from the UV background in low-mass haloes, stellar feedback in intermediate-mass haloes, and AGN feedback in groups ($10{12} \leq M_{\rm 200c}/{\rm M_{\odot}}<10{14}$) are the dominant processes. Galaxy clusters are the least influenced by these processes on large scales. We introduce a new halo mass-dependent characteristic scale, the closure radius $R_{\rm c}$, within which all baryons associated with haloes are found. For groups and clusters, we introduce a universal relation between this scale and the halo baryon fraction: $R_{\rm c}/R_{\rm 200c,500c}-1=\beta(z)(1-f_{\rm b}(<R_{\rm 200c,500c})/f_{\rm b,cosmic})$, where $\beta(z)=\alpha\,(1+z)\gamma$, and $\alpha$ and $\gamma$ are free parameters fit using the simulations. Accordingly, we predict that all baryons associated with observed X-ray haloes can be found within $R_{\rm c}\sim 1.5-2.5 R_{\rm 200c}$. Our results can be used to constrain theoretical models, particularly the physics of supernova and AGN feedback, as well as their interplay with environmental processes, through comparison with current and future X-ray and SZ observations.

Citations (14)

Summary

Paper to Video (Beta)

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.