Local Luminous Infrared Galaxies. III. Co-evolution of Black Hole Growth and Star Formation Activity?
Almudena Alonso-Herrero (1), Miguel Pereira-Santaella (2), George H., Rieke (3), Aleksandar M. Diamond-Stanic (4), Yiping Wang (5), Antonio, Hernan-Caballero (1), Dimitra Rigopoulou (6) ((1) IFCA, Spain, (2) INAF-IAPS,, Italy (3) Steward Observatory

TL;DR
This study investigates the simultaneous growth of black holes and star formation in local luminous infrared galaxies, revealing a sequence where intense star formation precedes significant black hole accretion.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the co-evolution of black holes and star formation in LIRGs, showing a temporal sequence and differences from optically selected Seyferts.
Findings
Most LIRGs have star formation occurring both in the nucleus and the host galaxy.
SFR to BHAR ratios are higher in LIRGs than in optically selected Seyferts.
AGN activity tends to be higher in LIRGs with lower SFRs.
Abstract
Local luminous infrared (IR) galaxies (LIRGs) have both high star formation rates (SFR) and a high AGN (Seyfert and AGN/starburst composite) incidence. Therefore, they are ideal candidates to explore the co-evolution of black hole (BH) growth and star formation (SF) activity, not necessarily associated with major mergers. Here, we use Spitzer/IRS spectroscopy of a complete volume-limited sample of local LIRGs (distances of <78Mpc). We estimate typical BH masses of 3x10^7 M_sun using [NeIII]15.56micron and optical [OIII]5007A gas velocity dispersions and literature stellar velocity dispersions. We find that in a large fraction of local LIRGs the current SFR is taking place not only in the inner nuclear ~1.5kpc region, as estimated from the nuclear 11.3micron PAH luminosities, but also in the host galaxy. We next use the ratios between the SFRs and BH accretion rates (BHAR) to study…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
