TY - JOUR
T1 - The case for large-scale AGN feedback in galaxy formation: insights from XFABLE simulations
AU - Bigwood, Leah
AU - Bourne, Martin A.
AU - Irsic, Vid
AU - Amon, Alexandra
AU - Sijacki, Debora
N1 - © The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society. This is an Open Access article distributed under
the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
PY - 2025/10/31
Y1 - 2025/10/31
N2 - While cosmological simulations of galaxy formation have reached maturity and are able to reproduce many fundamental galaxy and halo properties, no consensus has yet been reached on the impact of 'baryonic feedback' on the non-linear matter power spectrum. This severely limits the precision of (and potentially biases) small-scale cosmological constraints obtained from weak lensing and galaxy surveys. Recent observational evidence indicates that 'baryonic feedback' may be more extreme than commonly assumed in current cosmological hydrodynamical simulations. In this paper, we therefore explore a range of empirical active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback models, within the FABLE simulation suite, with different parametrizations as a function of cosmic time, host halo properties, and/or spatial location where feedback energy is thermalized. We demonstrate that an AGN radio-mode feedback acting in a larger population of black holes, with jets thermalizing at relatively large cluster-centric distances, as exemplified by our XFABLE model, is in good agreement with the latest weak lensing + kSZ constraints across all k-scales. Furthermore, XFABLE maintains good agreement with the galaxy stellar mass function, and gas fraction measurements, as well as consistency with key galaxy group and cluster properties, including scaling relations and intracluster medium radial profiles, within current observational uncertainties. Our work highlights the pressing need to model black hole accretion and feedback physics with a greater level of realism, including relativistic magnetized jets in full cosmological simulations. Finally, we discuss how a range of complementary observational probes in the near future will enable us to constrain AGN feedback models, and therefore reduce 'baryonic feedback' modelling uncertainty for the upcoming era of large cosmological surveys.
AB - While cosmological simulations of galaxy formation have reached maturity and are able to reproduce many fundamental galaxy and halo properties, no consensus has yet been reached on the impact of 'baryonic feedback' on the non-linear matter power spectrum. This severely limits the precision of (and potentially biases) small-scale cosmological constraints obtained from weak lensing and galaxy surveys. Recent observational evidence indicates that 'baryonic feedback' may be more extreme than commonly assumed in current cosmological hydrodynamical simulations. In this paper, we therefore explore a range of empirical active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback models, within the FABLE simulation suite, with different parametrizations as a function of cosmic time, host halo properties, and/or spatial location where feedback energy is thermalized. We demonstrate that an AGN radio-mode feedback acting in a larger population of black holes, with jets thermalizing at relatively large cluster-centric distances, as exemplified by our XFABLE model, is in good agreement with the latest weak lensing + kSZ constraints across all k-scales. Furthermore, XFABLE maintains good agreement with the galaxy stellar mass function, and gas fraction measurements, as well as consistency with key galaxy group and cluster properties, including scaling relations and intracluster medium radial profiles, within current observational uncertainties. Our work highlights the pressing need to model black hole accretion and feedback physics with a greater level of realism, including relativistic magnetized jets in full cosmological simulations. Finally, we discuss how a range of complementary observational probes in the near future will enable us to constrain AGN feedback models, and therefore reduce 'baryonic feedback' modelling uncertainty for the upcoming era of large cosmological surveys.
KW - astro-ph.CO
KW - astro-ph.GA
KW - galaxies: formation
KW - black hole physics
KW - large-scale structure of Universe
KW - methods: numerical
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105016613798
U2 - 10.1093/mnras/staf1435
DO - 10.1093/mnras/staf1435
M3 - Article
SN - 0035-8711
VL - 542
SP - 3206
EP - 3230
JO - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS)
JF - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS)
IS - 4
M1 - staf1435
ER -