Are galaxies with AGN a transition population?
P. B. Westoby, C. G. Mundell, I. K. Baldry

TL;DR
This study analyzes galaxy samples from SDSS to investigate whether AGN host galaxies are a transitional population, finding they are mostly bulge-dominated and not necessarily in transition, with environment influencing AGN activity.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of active and inactive galaxies, challenging the idea that AGN hosts are a transitional phase in galaxy evolution.
Findings
AGN hosts are predominantly on the red sequence.
Composite galaxies peak in the valley between red and blue sequences.
AGN activity is more common in less dense environments.
Abstract
We present the results of an analysis of a well-selected sample of galaxies with active and inactive galactic nuclei from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, in the range 0.01 < z < 0.16. The SDSS galaxy catalogue was split into two classes of active galaxies, Type~2 AGN and composites, and one set of inactive, star-forming/passive galaxies. For each active galaxy, two inactive control galaxies were selected by matching redshift, absolute magnitude, inclination, and radius. The sample of inactive galaxies naturally divides into a red and a blue sequence, while the vast majority of AGN hosts occur along the red sequence. In terms of H-alpha equivalent width, the population of composite galaxies peaks in the valley between the two modes, suggesting a transition population. However, this effect is not observed in other properties such as colour-magnitude space, or colour-concentration plane.…
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