GOODS-Herschel: The far-infrared view of star formation in AGN host galaxies since z~3
J. R. Mullaney (1), M. Pannella (1), E. Daddi (1), D. M. Alexander, (2), D. Elbaz (1), R. C. Hickox (2), F. Bournaud (1), B. Altieri (3), H., Aussel (1), D. Coia (3), H. Dannerbauer (1), K. Dasyra (1, 4), M., Dickinson (5), H. S. Hwang (1), J. Kartaltepe (5), R. Leiton (1)

TL;DR
This study uses deep Herschel infrared data to analyze star formation in AGN host galaxies up to redshift 3, finding that star formation is largely decoupled from AGN activity and is mainly influenced by galaxy stellar mass.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of infrared properties of X-ray selected AGNs up to z~3 using GOODS-Herschel data, highlighting the role of galaxy mass in AGN hosting.
Findings
Star formation rates increase with redshift for AGN hosts.
Most AGN hosts are in main-sequence galaxies, with a small fraction in quiescent or starbursting galaxies.
Galaxy stellar mass strongly influences the likelihood of hosting a moderate luminosity AGN.
Abstract
We present a study of the infrared properties of X-ray selected, moderate luminosity (Lx=10^{42}-10^{44}ergs/s) active galactic nuclei (AGNs) up to z~3, to explore the links between star formation in galaxies and accretion onto their central black holes. We use 100um and 160um fluxes from GOODS-Herschel -the deepest survey yet undertaken by the Herschel telescope- and show that in >94 per cent of cases these fluxes are dominated by the host. We find no evidence of any correlation between the X-ray and infrared luminosities of moderate AGNs at any redshift, suggesting that star-formation is decoupled from nuclear (AGN) activity. The star formation rates of AGN hosts increase strongly with redshift; by a factor of 43 from z<0.1 to z=2-3 for AGNs with the same X-ray luminosities. This increase is consistent with the factor of 25-50 increase in the specific star formation rates (SSFRs) of…
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