Interactions, star formation and AGN activity
Cheng Li, Guinevere Kauffmann, Timothy M. Heckman, Simon D. M. White,, Y. P. Jing

TL;DR
Galaxy interactions boost star formation in general, but do not enhance nuclear activity or black hole accretion in AGN, indicating these processes are temporally separated.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that close galaxy companions do not influence black hole accretion rates, contrasting with their effect on star formation, suggesting distinct or sequential processes.
Findings
Star formation is enhanced in galaxies with close neighbors.
Black hole accretion rates are unaffected by galaxy interactions.
Star formation and black hole accretion are likely separate events.
Abstract
It has long been known that galaxy interactions are associated with enhanced star formation. In a companion paper, we explored this connection by applying a variety of statistics to SDSS data. In particular, we showed that specific star formation rates of galaxies are higher if they have close neighbours. Here we apply exactly the same techniques to AGN in the survey, showing that close neighbours are not associated with any similar enhancement of nuclear activity. Star formation is enhanced in AGN with close neighbours in exactly the same way as in inactive galaxies, but the accretion rate onto the black hole, as estimated from the extinction-corrected [O III] luminosity, is not influenced by the presence or absence of companions. Previous work has shown that galaxies with more strongly accreting black holes contain more young stars in their inner regions. This leads us to conclude…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
