The drivers of AGN activity in galaxy clusters: AGN fraction as a function of mass and environment
K. A. Pimbblet, S. S. Shabala, C. P. Haines, A. Fraser-McKelvie, D. J., E. Floyd

TL;DR
This study investigates how AGN activity varies with galaxy mass and environment in galaxy clusters, revealing that AGN fraction depends on radius, galaxy mass, and velocity offsets, with implications for triggering mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of optical spectroscopically-identified AGN in galaxy clusters, highlighting the influence of galaxy mass, radius, and velocity on AGN activity, and clarifies the spatial distribution of different AGN types.
Findings
AGN fraction increases from cluster center to 1.5 R_virial
Massive galaxies host a higher fraction of AGN at all radii
Most powerful AGN are found at significant velocity offsets
Abstract
[Abridged] We present an analysis of optical spectroscopically-identified AGN to M*+1 in a sample of 6 self-similar SDSS galaxy clusters at z=0.07. These clusters are specifically selected to lack significant substructure at bright limits in their central regions so that we are largely able to eliminate the local action of merging clusters on the frequency of AGN. We demonstrate that the AGN fraction increases significantly from the cluster centre to 1.5Rvirial, but tails off at larger radii. If only comparing the cluster core region to regions at ~2Rvirial, no significant variation would be found. We compute the AGN fraction by mass and show that massive galaxies (log(stellar mass)>10.7) are host to a systematically higher fraction of AGN than lower mass galaxies at all radii from the cluster centre. We attribute this deficit of AGN in the cluster centre to the changing mix of galaxy…
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