Enhanced star formation rates in AGN hosts with respect to inactive galaxies from PEP-Herschel observations
P. Santini, D. J. Rosario, L. Shao, D. Lutz, R. Maiolino, D. M., Alexander, B. Altieri, P. Andreani, H. Aussel, F. E. Bauer, S. Berta, A., Bongiovanni, W. N. Brandt, M. Brusa, J. Cepa, A. Cimatti, E. Daddi, D. Elbaz,, A. Fontana, N. M. Forster Schreiber, R. Genzel, A. Grazian

TL;DR
This study shows that AGN host galaxies generally have higher star formation rates than inactive galaxies, with the enhancement depending on AGN luminosity, and suggests different growth pathways for faint and luminous AGNs.
Contribution
It provides the first unbiased comparison of star formation activity in X-ray selected AGN hosts and inactive galaxies using Herschel far-IR data, revealing a nuanced view of AGN-galaxy co-evolution.
Findings
AGN hosts show modest star formation enhancement at low X-ray luminosities.
Luminous AGNs exhibit significantly higher star formation rates.
Far-IR data indicates a higher fraction of highly star-forming systems among AGN hosts.
Abstract
We compare the average star formation (SF) activity in X-ray selected AGN hosts with mass-matched control inactive galaxies,including star forming and quiescent sources, at 0.5<z<2.5. Recent observations carried out by PACS, the 60-210um Herschel photometric camera, in GOODS-S, GOODS-N and COSMOS allow us to unbiasedly estimate the far-IR luminosity, and hence the SF properties, of the two samples. Accurate AGN host stellar masses are measured by decomposing their total emission into the stellar and nuclear components. We find a higher average SF activity in AGN hosts with respect to non-AGNs. The level of SF enhancement is modest (~0.26dex at ~3sigma) at low X-ray luminosities (Lx<~10^43.5erg/s) and more pronounced (0.56dex at >10sigma) for bright AGNs. However, when comparing to star forming galaxies only, AGN hosts are broadly consistent with the locus of their `main sequence'. We…
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