Concurrent Supermassive Black Hole and Galaxy Growth: Linking Environment and Nuclear Activity in z = 2.23 H-alpha Emitters
B. D. Lehmer, A. B. Lucy, D. M. Alexander, P. N. Best, J. E. Geach, C., M. Harrison, A. E. Hornschemeier, Y. Matsuda, J. R. Mullaney, Ian Smail, D., Sobral, and A. M. Swinbank

TL;DR
This study investigates the link between environment, star formation, and black hole growth in galaxies at z=2.23, revealing higher AGN activity in dense regions and implications for galaxy evolution models.
Contribution
It provides new evidence of increased AGN fraction in dense environments at z=2.23 and compares SMBH accretion and star formation rates with local relations.
Findings
Higher AGN fraction in overdense environments (~3.5 times) compared to field.
Mean SMBH accretion rates consistent with local MBH/M* relation.
2QZ Clus galaxies show QSO-like luminosities and accretion rates.
Abstract
We present results from a ~100 ks Chandra observation of the 2QZ Cluster 1004+00 structure at z = 2.23 (hereafter, 2QZ Clus). 2QZ Clus was originally identified as an overdensity of four optically-selected QSOs at z = 2.23 within a 15x15 arcmin^2 region. Narrow-band imaging in the near-IR revealed that the structure contains an additional overdensity of 22 z = 2.23 Halpha-emitting galaxies (HAEs), resulting in 23 unique z = 2.23 HAEs/QSOs. Our Chandra observations reveal that 3 HAEs in addition to the 4 QSOs harbor powerfully accreting supermassive black holes (SMBHs), with 2-10 keV luminosities of ~(8-60) x 10^43 ergs/s and X-ray spectral slopes consistent with unobscured AGN. Using a large comparison sample of 210 HAEs in Chandra-COSMOS (C-COSMOS), we find suggestive evidence that the AGN fraction increases with local HAE galaxy density. The 2QZ Clus HAEs reside in a moderately…
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