Ongoing and co-evolving star formation in zCOSMOS galaxies hosting Active Galactic Nuclei
J. D. Silverman, F. Lamareille, C. Maier, S. Lilly, V. Mainieri, M., Brusa, N. Cappelluti, G. Hasinger, G. Zamorani, M. Scodeggio, M. Bolzonella,, T. Contini, C. M. Carollo, K. Jahnke, J.-P. Kneib, O. Le Fevre, A. Merloni,, S. Bardelli, A. Bongiorno, H. Brunner, K. Caputi

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between star formation and AGN activity in zCOSMOS galaxies up to redshift 1, revealing a strong link with galaxy properties and suggesting co-evolution with complex fueling mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the co-evolution of supermassive black holes and host galaxies, highlighting the weak direct correlation between accretion rates and star formation.
Findings
Most AGN hosts have significant star formation activity.
AGN fraction increases with younger stellar populations.
SFR evolution in AGN hosts mirrors the overall galaxy population.
Abstract
We present a study of the host galaxies of AGN selected from the zCOSMOS survey to establish if accretion onto supermassive black holes and star formation are explicitly linked up to z~1. We identify 152 galaxies that harbor AGN, based on XMM observations of 7543 galaxies (i<22.5). Star formation rates (SFRs), including those weighted by stellar mass, are determined using the [OII]3727 emission-line, corrected for an AGN contribution. We find that the majority of AGN hosts have significant levels of star formation with a distribution spanning ~1-100 Msun yr^-1. The close association between AGN activity and star formation is further substantiated by an increase in the AGN fraction with the youthfulness of their stars as indicated by the rest-frame color (U-V) and spectral index Dn(4000); we demonstrate that mass-selection alleviates an artifical peak falling in the transition region…
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