English

Probing the link between quenching and morphological evolution

Astrophysics of Galaxies 2022-09-27 v1

Abstract

We use a semianalytic model of galaxy formation to compare the predictions of two quenching scenarios: halo quenching and black-hole (BH) quenching. After calibrating both models so that they fit the mass function of galaxies, BH quenching is in better agreement with the fraction of passive galaxies as a function of stellar mass MM_* and with the galaxy morphological distribution on a star-formation-rate vs. MM_* diagram. Besides this main finding, there are two other results from this research. First, a successful BH-quenching model requires that minor mergers contribute to the growth of supermassive BHs. If galaxies that reach high MM_* through repeated minor mergers are not quenched, there are too many blue galaxies at high masses. Second, the growth of BHs in mergers must become less efficient at low masses in order to reproduce the MBHM_{\rm BH}--MM_* relation and the passive fraction as a function of MM_*, in agreement with the idea that supernovae prevent efficient BH growth in systems with low escape speeds. Our findings are consistent with a quasar-feedback scenario in which BHs grow until they are massive enough to blow away the cold gas in their host galaxies and to heat the hot circumgalactic medium to such high entropy that its cooling time becomes long. They also support the notion that quenching and maintenance correspond to different feedback regimes.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2209.12883,
  title  = {Probing the link between quenching and morphological evolution},
  author = {Ioanna Koutsouridou and Andrea Cattaneo},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2209.12883},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

21 pages, 10 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-28T02:08:00.564Z