Host galaxies, clustering, Eddington ratios, and evolution of radio, X-ray, and infrared-selected AGNs
Ryan C. Hickox, Christine Jones, William R. Forman, Stephen S. Murray,, Christopher S. Kochanek, Daniel Eisenstein, Buell T. Jannuzi, Arjun Dey,, Michael J.I. Brown, Daniel Stern, Peter R. Eisenhardt, Varoujan Gorjian, Mark, Brodwin, Ramesh Narayan, Richard J. Cool, Almus Kenter

TL;DR
This study investigates how different types of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) relate to their host galaxies' properties, clustering, and evolution, revealing distinct environments and accretion modes for radio, X-ray, and infrared-selected AGNs.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of host galaxy characteristics, clustering, and Eddington ratios across multiple AGN selection methods, highlighting their evolutionary stages and environments.
Findings
Radio AGNs are in luminous red galaxies with strong clustering and low Eddington ratios.
X-ray AGNs are in green valley galaxies with moderate clustering and Eddington ratios.
IR AGNs are in bluer, less luminous galaxies with weak clustering and higher Eddington ratios.
Abstract
We explore the connection between different classes of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) and the evolution of their host galaxies, by deriving host galaxy properties, clustering, and Eddington ratios of AGNs selected in the radio, X-ray, and infrared. We study a sample of 585 AGNs at 0.25 < z < 0.8 using redshifts from the AGN and Galaxy Evolution Survey (AGES) and data in the radio (WSRT 1.4 GHz), X-rays (Chandra XBootes), and mid-IR (IRAC Shallow Survey). The radio, X-ray, and IR AGN samples show modest overlap, indicating that to the flux limits of the survey, they represent largely distinct classes of AGNs. We derive host galaxy colors and luminosities, as well as Eddington ratios (lambda), for obscured or optically faint AGNs. We also measure the two-point cross-correlation between AGNs and galaxies on scales of 0.3-10 h^-1 Mpc, and derive typical dark matter halo masses. We find that:…
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