The Field X-ray AGN Fraction to z=0.7 from the Chandra Multiwavelength Project and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Daryl Haggard, Paul J. Green, Scott F. Anderson, Anca Constantin, Tom, L. Aldcroft, Dong-Woo Kim, Wayne A. Barkhouse

TL;DR
This study measures the fraction of X-ray-active galaxies in the field up to redshift 0.7 using ChaMP and SDSS data, revealing how AGN activity varies with galaxy properties and redshift.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive measurement of the field AGN fraction to z=0.7 using combined Chandra and SDSS data, with detailed completeness analysis.
Findings
Field AGN fraction ranges from 0.16% to 3.80% depending on redshift and luminosity.
Strong agreement between field and cluster AGN fractions in similar parameter spaces.
Results are consistent with previous deep field studies, considering selection differences.
Abstract
We employ the Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP) and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to study the fraction of X-ray-active galaxies in the field out to z = 0.7. We utilize spectroscopic redshifts from SDSS and ChaMP, as well as photometric redshifts from several SDSS catalogs, to compile a parent sample of more than 100,000 SDSS galaxies and nearly 1,600 Chandra X-ray detections. Detailed ChaMP volume completeness maps allow us to investigate the local fraction of active galactic nuclei (AGN), defined as those objects having broad-band X-ray luminosities L_X (0.5-8 keV) > 10^42 erg s^-1, as a function of absolute optical magnitude, X-ray luminosity, redshift, mass, and host color/morphological type. In five independent samples complete in redshift and i-band absolute magnitude, we determine the field AGN fraction to be between 0.16 +/- 0.06% (for z < 0.125 and -18 > M_i > -20)…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
