Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Firmly anchored on observational data, giant radio lobes from massive galaxies hosting supermassive black holes can exert a major negative feedback effect, by endowing the intergalactic gas with significant magnetic pressure hence retarding or preventing gas accretion onto less massive halos in the vicinity. Since massive galaxies that are largely responsible for producing the giant radio lobes, this effect is expected to be stronger in more overdense large-scale environments, such as protoclusters, than in underdense regions, such as voids. We show that by redshift Formula: see text halos with masses up to Formula: see text are significantly hindered from accreting gas due to this effect for radio bubble volume filling fraction of Formula: see text, respectively. Since the vast majority of the stars in the universe at Formula: see textFormula: see text 2 to 3 form precisely in those halos, this negative feedback process is likely one major culprit for causing the global downturn in star formation in the universe. It also provides a natural explanation for the rather sudden flattening of the slope of the galaxy rest-frame UV luminosity function around Formula: see text. A cross-correlation between protoclusters and Faraday rotation measures may test the predicted magnetic field. Inclusion of this external feedback process in the next generation of cosmological simulations may be imperative.
Renyue Cen (Mon,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: