AGN Environments in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey I: Dependence on Type, Redshift, and Luminosity
Natalie E. Strand, Robert J. Brunner, Adam D. Myers

TL;DR
This study investigates how the local galaxy environment around active galactic nuclei varies with their type, luminosity, and redshift, revealing that more luminous AGN tend to be in denser regions, with differences observed between Type I and Type II AGN.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of the environments of different AGN types and luminosities using SDSS data, highlighting environmental dependence on AGN properties.
Findings
Higher luminosity AGN are in more overdense environments.
Type II quasars have environments similar to bright Type I quasars.
Type II AGN are more overdense than Type I AGN on all scales.
Abstract
We explore how the local environment is related to the redshift, type, and luminosity of active galactic nuclei (AGN). Recent simulations and observations are converging on the view that the extreme luminosity of quasars is fueled in major mergers of gas-rich galaxies. In such a picture, quasars are expected to be located in regions with a higher density of galaxies on small scales where mergers are more likely to take place. However, in this picture, the activity observed in low-luminosity AGN is due to secular processes that are less dependent on the local galaxy density. To test this hypothesis, we compare the local photometric galaxy density on kiloparsec scales around spectroscopic Type I and Type II quasars to the local density around lower luminosity spectroscopic Type I and Type II AGN. To minimize projection effects and evolution in the photometric galaxy sample we use to…
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