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First Results from the TNG50 Simulation: Galactic outflows driven by supernovae and black hole feedback

MPS-Authors

Nelson,  Dylan
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Max Planck Society and Cooperation Partners;

Pillepich,  Annalisa
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Max Planck Society and Cooperation Partners;

Springel,  Volker
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Max Planck Society and Cooperation Partners;

Pakmor,  Rüdiger
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Max Planck Society and Cooperation Partners;

Weinberger,  Rainer
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Max Planck Society and Cooperation Partners;

Genel,  Shy
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Max Planck Society and Cooperation Partners;

Torrey,  Paul
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Max Planck Society and Cooperation Partners;

Vogelsberger,  Mark
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Max Planck Society and Cooperation Partners;

Marinacci,  Federico
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Max Planck Society and Cooperation Partners;

Hernquist,  Lars
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Max Planck Society and Cooperation Partners;

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Citation

Nelson, D., Pillepich, A., Springel, V., Pakmor, R., Weinberger, R., Genel, S., et al. (2019). First Results from the TNG50 Simulation: Galactic outflows driven by supernovae and black hole feedback. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2010.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0005-D050-5
Abstract
We present the new TNG50 cosmological, magnetohydrodynamical simulation - the third and final volume of the IllustrisTNG project. This simulation occupies a unique combination of large volume and high resolution, with a 50 Mpc box sampled by 21603 gas cells (baryon mass of 8 × 104 M). The median spatial resolution of star-forming ISM gas is ̃100 -140 parsecs. This resolution approaches or exceeds that of modern `zoom' simulations of individual massive galaxies, while the volume contains ̃ 20,000 resolved galaxies with M_\star ≳ 10^7 M. Herein we show first results from TNG50, focusing on galactic outflows driven by supernovae as well as supermassive black hole feedback. We find that the outflow mass loading is a non-monotonic function of galaxy stellar mass, turning over and rising rapidly above 1010.5 M due to the action of the central black hole. Outflow velocity increases with stellar mass, and at fixed mass is faster at higher redshift. The TNG model can produce high velocity, multi-phase outflows which include cool, dense components. These outflows reach speeds in excess of 3000 km/s out to 20 kpc with an ejective, BH-driven origin. Critically, we show how the relative simplicity of model inputs (and scalings) at the injection scale produces complex behavior at galactic and halo scales. For example, despite isotropic wind launching, outflows exhibit natural collimation and an emergent bipolarity. Furthermore, galaxies above the star-forming main sequence drive faster outflows, although this correlation inverts at high mass with the onset of quenching, whereby low luminosity, slowly accreting, massive black holes drive the strongest outflows.