The Rise and Fall of Galaxy Activity in Dark Matter Haloes
Anna Pasquali, Frank C. van den Bosch, H. J. Mo, Xiaohu Yang, Rachel, Somerville

TL;DR
This study analyzes how galaxy activity varies with stellar and halo mass, revealing that environment influences activity type, but stellar mass also plays a significant role, especially for satellite galaxies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed observational analysis of galaxy activity dependence on halo and stellar mass, clarifying the roles of environment and intrinsic properties.
Findings
Galaxy activity transitions smoothly with halo mass.
Satellite activity depends more on stellar mass than halo mass.
Massive haloes host radio-active central galaxies.
Abstract
We use a SDSS galaxy group catalogue to study the dependence of galaxy activity on stellar mass, halo mass, and group hierarchy (centrals vs. satellites). We split our galaxy sample in star-forming galaxies, galaxies with optical AGN activity and radio sources. We find a smooth transition in halo mass as the activity of central galaxies changes from star formation to optical AGN activity to radio emission. Star-forming centrals preferentially reside in haloes with M<10^{12} Msun, central galaxies with optical-AGN activity typically inhabit haloes with M \sim 10^{13} Msun, and centrals emitting in the radio mainly reside in haloes more massive than 10^{14} Msun. Although this seems to suggest that the environment (halo mass) determines the type of activity of its central galaxy, we find a similar trend with stellar mass: central star formers typically have stellar masses below 10^{10}…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
