An Observed Link between Active Galactic Nuclei and Violent Disk Instabilities in High-Redshift Galaxies
Frederic Bournaud (1), Stephanie Juneau (2,1), Emeric Le Floc'h (1),, James Mullaney (1), Emanuele Daddi (1), Avishai Dekel (3), Pierre-Alain Duc, (1), David Elbaz (1), Fadia Salmi (1), Mark Dickinson (4) ((1) CEA Saclay,, (2) University of Arizona

TL;DR
This study finds a strong correlation between giant clumps caused by gravitational instability in high-redshift disk galaxies and the presence of active galactic nuclei, suggesting a link between galaxy instability and black hole growth.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence connecting violent disk instabilities with AGN activity in gas-rich galaxies at intermediate redshifts, highlighting a potential mechanism for black hole growth.
Findings
Clumpy disks have a high probability of hosting AGN.
Stacked X-ray data shows an excess indicating obscured AGN presence.
AGN in clumpy disks have bolometric luminosities around 10^43 erg/s.
Abstract
We provide evidence for a correlation between the presence of giant clumps and the occurrence of active galactic nuclei (AGN) in disk galaxies. Giant clumps of 10^8-9 Msun arise from violent gravitational instability in gas-rich galaxies, and it has been proposed that this instability could feed supermassive black holes (BH). We use emission line diagnostics to compare a sample of 14 clumpy (unstable) disks and a sample of 13 smoother (stable) disks at redshift z~0.7. The majority of clumpy disks in our sample have a high probability of containing AGN. Their [OIII] emission line is strongly excited, inconsistent with low-metallicity star formation alone. [NeIII] excitation is also higher. Stable disks rarely have such properties. Stacking ultra sensitive Chandra observations (4 Ms) reveals an X-ray excess in clumpy galaxies, which cannot be solely due to star formation and confirms the…
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