Seminar
    AGN feedback from Mpc to pc scale: radio-mode, quasar-mode and backflows
Resumen
Mechanical feedback by jets from Active Galactic Nucei (AGN) is a  key process in galaxies and galaxy clusters: the energy input from the  jets (in literature often addressed as radio-mode feedback) is crucial  in determining the properties of the hot gas (especially in cool-core  galaxy clusters), as well as inflating the large cavities we observe in  the X-ray gas. The interaction of AGN outflows (both jets and radiation)  with cold gas in galactic environment  (quasar-mode feedback) can  instead impact the cosmic star formation rate, as well as power  galaxy-wide atomic and molecular outflows. Finally, AGN can affect its  own proximity, regulating central gas accretion and giving rise to  (sometimes) self-sustained feeding/feedback cycles.
I  will follow the interaction of AGN with intergalactic and interstellar  gas from large to small scales (radio-mode) with the use of numerical  simulations. As radio-mode feedback, I will discuss the properties and  the energetics of the hot gas bubbles inflated by multiple jet events  in a galaxy cluster, with the aid of synthetic but realistic X-ray  observations. On galactic scales, I will discuss the  mechanical coupling of jets and radiation with a clumpy galactic disc,  show how AGN can trigger dense and fast outflows, and briefly describe  the impact on galactic star formation.
I will finally  discuss "backflows" --- i.e. galaxy-wide gas circulation patterns that  "flow back" to the circum-nuclear region --- as a mechanism for AGN  self-regulation. I will show, complementing the simulations with a  small-scale analytical model, how backflows are able to convey large  amounts of cold gas to the central region, that can boost the AGN power  by even a factor of ten.
Sobre la charla
IAP
       
   
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