We present an analysis of 109 moderate- luminosity (41.9 <= log L0.5-8. 0 keV <= 43.7) AGNs in the Extended Chandra Deep Field-South survey, which is drawn from 5549 galaxies from the COMBO-17 and GEMS surveys having 0.4 <= z <= 1.1. These obscured or optically weak AGNs facilitate the study of their host galaxies since the AGNs provide an insubstantial amount of contamination to the galaxy light. We find that the color distribution of AGN host galaxies is highly dependent on ( 1) the strong color-evolution of luminous ( M-V < -20.7) galaxies, and ( 2) the influence of similar to 10 Mpc scale structures. When excluding galaxies within the redshift range 0.63 <= z <= 0.76, a regime dominated by sources in large-scale structures at z 0: 67 and z 0: 73, we observe a bimodality in the host galaxy colors. Galaxies hosting AGNs at z greater than or similar to 0.8 preferentially have bluer (rest-frame U - V < 0: 7) colors than their z less than or similar to 0.6 counterparts ( many of which fall along the red sequence). The fraction of galaxies hosting AGNs peaks in the "green valley'' ( 0.5 < U - V < 1.0); this is primarily due to enhanced AGN activity in the redshift interval 0.63 <= z <= 0.76. The AGN fraction in this redshift and color interval is 12.8% ( compared to its "field'' value of 7.8%) and reaches a maximum of 14.8% at U - V similar to 0.8. We further find that blue, bulge-dominated ( Sersic index n > 2.5) galaxies have the highest fraction of AGN (21%) in our sample. We explore the scenario that the evolution of AGN hosts is driven by galaxy mergers and illustrate that an accurate assessment requires a larger area survey since only three hosts may be undergoing a merger with timescales less than or similar to 1 Gyr following a starburst phase.

The evolution of agn host galaxies: From blue to red and the influence of large-scale structures

ROSATI, Piero;
2008

Abstract

We present an analysis of 109 moderate- luminosity (41.9 <= log L0.5-8. 0 keV <= 43.7) AGNs in the Extended Chandra Deep Field-South survey, which is drawn from 5549 galaxies from the COMBO-17 and GEMS surveys having 0.4 <= z <= 1.1. These obscured or optically weak AGNs facilitate the study of their host galaxies since the AGNs provide an insubstantial amount of contamination to the galaxy light. We find that the color distribution of AGN host galaxies is highly dependent on ( 1) the strong color-evolution of luminous ( M-V < -20.7) galaxies, and ( 2) the influence of similar to 10 Mpc scale structures. When excluding galaxies within the redshift range 0.63 <= z <= 0.76, a regime dominated by sources in large-scale structures at z 0: 67 and z 0: 73, we observe a bimodality in the host galaxy colors. Galaxies hosting AGNs at z greater than or similar to 0.8 preferentially have bluer (rest-frame U - V < 0: 7) colors than their z less than or similar to 0.6 counterparts ( many of which fall along the red sequence). The fraction of galaxies hosting AGNs peaks in the "green valley'' ( 0.5 < U - V < 1.0); this is primarily due to enhanced AGN activity in the redshift interval 0.63 <= z <= 0.76. The AGN fraction in this redshift and color interval is 12.8% ( compared to its "field'' value of 7.8%) and reaches a maximum of 14.8% at U - V similar to 0.8. We further find that blue, bulge-dominated ( Sersic index n > 2.5) galaxies have the highest fraction of AGN (21%) in our sample. We explore the scenario that the evolution of AGN hosts is driven by galaxy mergers and illustrate that an accurate assessment requires a larger area survey since only three hosts may be undergoing a merger with timescales less than or similar to 1 Gyr following a starburst phase.
2008
Silverman, Jd; Mainieri, V; Lehmer, Bd; Alexander, Dm; Bauer, Fe; Bergeron, J; Brandt, Wn; Gilli, R; Hasinger, G; Schneider, Dp; Tozzi, P; Vignali, C; Koekemoer, Am; Miyaji, T; Popesso, P; Rosati, Piero; Szokoly, G.
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in SFERA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11392/1854061
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 141
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 144
social impact