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Multi-wavelength Approach to joint formation and evolution of Galaxies and AGNs Fabio Fontanot Max-Planck-Institute fuer Astronomie, Heidelberg Lubiana,

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Presentation on theme: "Multi-wavelength Approach to joint formation and evolution of Galaxies and AGNs Fabio Fontanot Max-Planck-Institute fuer Astronomie, Heidelberg Lubiana,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Multi-wavelength Approach to joint formation and evolution of Galaxies and AGNs Fabio Fontanot Max-Planck-Institute fuer Astronomie, Heidelberg Lubiana, 25/03/08

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3 Outline Introduction to the problem of joint Formation of Galaxies and AGNs Theoretical perspective Observational Constraints Original Results Assembly of Massive Galaxies Evolution of the AGN population

4 Galaxy Formation and Evolution

5 1. Baryonic gas falls in the gravitational potential of Dark Matter Halos 2. Baryonic gas is shock-heated to the virial temperature

6 3. Radiative Cooling puts gas toward the center 4. Star Formation begins in disk-like structure

7 Dark Matter Halos Merger Tree TIME

8 Tidal Stripping Dynamical Friction Merging 5. Interaction of galaxies with the enviroment: instabilities modify galactic structures (bulge formation)

9 Galactic Winds Infall Feedback 6. Thermal processes in the baryonic gas Stellar

10 Active Galactic Nuclei

11 AGNs & Quasars Compact and luminous sources (L~10 46-49 erg/s) Accretion of gas onto a Supermassive Black Hole (10 6-9 Msun) at the center of galaxies Strong Connection with host galaxy formation and evolution (feedback, energy transfer) Padovani & Urry 1995

12 AGN – Host Galaxy connection Marconi & Hunt 2004

13 Observational Constraints

14 “Downsizing” Archeological Stellar populations in in massive galaxies are older than those in low-mass galaxies Massive galaxies are more metal rich than low- mass counterparts (Gallazzi+ 2005) Star formation timescales are shorter in massive galaxies (Thomas+ 2005) Stellar Mass Assembly Massive galaxies already in place at high-z (Cimatti+ 2006, Conselice+ 2007) Star Formation Activity Specific star formation rate declines more rapidly for massive galaxies (Panther+ 2007; Zheng+ 2007)

15 Space density of brighter AGNs peaks at higher redshift with respect to fainter ones Most massive BH accreted their mass faster and at higher redshift with respect to low-mass ones (Shankar+ 2004) Anti-hierarchical behavior of baryons

16 Zheng et al. 2007

17 MORGANA Model for the Rise of GAlaxies aNd Agns (Monaco, Fontanot & Taffoni, 2007)

18 1: Complexity Mass flows Outside the integration disc instabilities minor and major mergers tidal stripping and disruption quasar winds

19 2: Cooling & Infall hot polytropic gas in hydrostatic equilibrium equilibrium computed at each time-step gas is cold within the cooling radius the cooling radius is a dynamical variable that takes into account the hot gas from feedback

20 Viola+ 2008 MORGANA Cooling Simulations Gadget2 SPH code with entropy-conserving integration 60000 DM particles and 60000 gas particles inside the virial radius Static DM halo with NFW profile Gas profile in hydrostatic equilibrium Radiative cooling switched on Classical Cooling

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22 3: Feedback Stellar Feedback Stars provide both thermal and kinetic energy to cold gas (by Starlight and/or SNe explosions) Improved modeling (Monaco, 2004) with two phase treatment of star forming ISM

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24 3: Feedback Stellar Feedback Stars provide both thermal and kinetic energy to cold gas (by Starlight and/or SNe explosions) Improved modeling (Monaco, 2004) with two phase treatment of star forming ISM Kinetic feedback Velocity dispersion of cold clouds σ cold = σ 0 t * -⅓

25 3: Feedback QSO feedback Accretion on central BH Energy Input

26 1. Black Hole (BH) seed in every model galaxy 2. Creation of Gas Reservoir following instabilities (Granato+ 2004) 3. QSO shining & Feedback

27 3: Feedback QSO feedback Accretion on central BH Energy Input QSO shining is able to change the physical conditions of stellar feedback in galaxies (Monaco & Fontanot, 2005) Triggering of galactic winds (“QSO Mode”?)

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29 3: Feedback QSO feedback Accretion on central BH Energy Input QSO shining is able to change the physical conditions of stellar feedback in galaxies (Monaco & Fontanot, 2005) Triggering of galactic winds (“QSO Mode”?) Feedback from Radio Jets Bringing energy from the center to the external regions Quenching of the cooling flows (“Radio Mode”)

30 4: Diffuse Stellar Component Monaco, Murante, Borgani, Fontanot, 2006

31 Hopkins 2004 Cosmic Star Formation Rate

32 Stellar Mass Function

33 Fontana+ 2006

34 The effect of stellar feedback and quasar winds on the AGN population (Fontanot, Monaco, Cristiani & Tozzi 2006)

35 Hard X-ray and Optical LF

36 Space Density Evolution

37 Effect of Kinetic Feedback

38 Black Hole – Bulge Relation

39 Evolution of the Black Hole – Bulge Relation Peng+ 2006

40 The assembly of massive galaxies in hierarchical cosmology (Fontanot, Monaco, Silva & Grazian 2007)

41 Spectrophotometric Codes GRASIL (Silva+ 1998) Includes the effect of age-selective extinction (younger stellar populations are more affected by dust extinction) Computes dust emission in infrared regions Salpeter IMF

42 Redshift Distribution Cimatti+ 2002

43 Redshift Distribution

44 K-band LFs Pozzetti+ 2003 Cirasuolo+ 2006

45 SCUBA counts

46 Downsizing? MORGANA Predictions GOODS-MUSIC data

47 Conclusions Models based on Lambda CDM cosmology are able to reproduce the properties of AGN and massive galaxies We are able to reproduce the anti-hierarchical behavior of black hole growth Winds are needed Kinetic stellar feedback We are able to reproduce the early assembly and late almost-passive evolution of massive galaxies Stellar feedback Improved modeling of cooling We are not able to reproduce the observed downsizing trend of stellar mass assembly

48 Metallicity

49 The High-z QSO Luminosity Function (Fontanot et al., 2007)

50 Motivations  Quasars are luminous but rare sources  Large area surveys vs Deep survey  Bright end vs Faint end  Faint end of Luminosity Function  Measure QSO contribution to the UV background (Madau et al., 1999)  Constraints on the mechanisms responsible of the joint formation of supermassive black holes and host galaxies

51 GOODS Project  Study Galaxy Formation and Evolution over a wide range of cosmic lookback times (Giavalisco et al., 2004)  Multiwavelenght survey  Two fields centered on HDFN and CDFS  total area 320 sqarcmin

52  Optical data from ACS (B 435, V 606, i 775, z 850 )  Selection Criteria (Cristiani et al., 2004)  Magnitude Limit 22.45 < z 850 < 25.25  Color Criteria tested on template spectra (Cristiani & Vio, 1990)  (i-z<0.35)∩(V-i<1.00)∩(1.00<B-V<3.00)  (i-z 3.00)  (i-z 0.80)∩(B-V>2.00)  (i-z 1.90) Selection of optical candidates

53  Quasar selected with 3.5<z<5.2  Also included Ly-break and Seyfert Galaxies

54 Matching with X-ray observations  1202 optically selected candidates  557 in HDFN + 645 in CDFS  Match with Chandra surveys  Alexander et al., 2003  Giacconi et al., 2002  16 Final candidates  10 in HDFN + 6 in CDFS

55 X-ray Matching  Estimate of Visibility (Vignali et al. 2003)  Any z > 3.5 x-ray source must harbour an AGN  Type I QSOs with M 145 < −21 up to z ~ 5.2 GOODS -S #6

56 Spectroscopic Follow-up  50 LBGs out of optically selected candidates  Results: QSO candidates (Vanzella et al., 2004)  3 low-z galaxies  12 QSOs with 2.6 < z < 5.2  2 QSOs with z > 4  QSO at z = 5.186 (Barger et al. 2001)  QSO at z = 4.76 (Vanzella et al. 2004)

57 High-z LF  Faint QSOs  GOODS observations (Cristiani et al., 2004)  Bright QSOs  SDSS Quasar Data Release 3 (DR3QSO: Schneider et al. 2005)  Key Issues  Understanding systematics, selection effects and completeness  Reproducing survey features

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59 Predicting QSO color evolution  Define a Statistical Sample of QSOs  High completeness redshift interval  2.2 < z < 2.25  High quality QSO spectra from SDSS  Sample of 215 QSOs  Building up template library  Computing restframe spectra  Fitting continuum  Simulating high redshift objects  Computing Statistical Properties

60 Choosing Redshift Interval

61 Results: Color Diagrams

62 Results: Color Evolution

63 Computing LFs  Analytical form for LF  Compute expected number of QSOs  Simulate magnitudes in photometric systems  Mock SDSS and GOODS catalogues  Apply selection criteria  Mock SDSS and GOODS selected catalogues  Compare observed and simulated objects  Define chi square estimator  Evaluate agreement between data and LF

64 Results: LFs FAINT END BRIGHT END

65 Results

66 Completeness


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