A Multi-Wavelength Study of Low Redshift Clusters of Galaxies I. Comparison of X-ray and Mid-Infrared Selected AGNs
David W. Atlee, Paul Martini, Roberto J. Assef, Daniel D. Kelson, John, S. Mulchaey

TL;DR
This study compares X-ray and mid-infrared selected AGNs in low-redshift galaxy clusters, revealing distinct host galaxy properties and suggesting that differences are due to extinction and star formation activity.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of X-ray and IR AGNs in galaxy clusters, highlighting their host galaxy characteristics and the reasons behind their apparent dichotomy.
Findings
IR AGNs have higher specific SFRs than X-ray AGNs.
The two AGN populations are mostly disjoint, with only 8 overlapping cases.
The distributions of AGNs are similar to other cluster members.
Abstract
Clusters of galaxies have long been used as laboratories for the study of galaxy evolution, but despite intense, recent interest in feedback between AGNs and their hosts, the impact of environment on these relationships remains poorly constrained. We present results from a study of AGNs and their host galaxies found in low-redshift galaxy clusters. We fit model spectral energy distributions (SEDs) to the combined visible and mid-infrared (MIR) photometry of cluster members and use these model SEDs to determine stellar masses and star-formation rates (SFRs). We identify two populations of AGNs, the first based on their X-ray luminosities (X-ray AGNs) and the second based on the presence of a significant AGN component in their model SEDs (IR AGNs). We find that the two AGN populations are nearly disjoint; only 8 out of 44 AGNs are identified with both techniques. We further find that IR…
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