The Relation between Luminous AGNs and Star Formation in Their Host Galaxies
Lei Xu, G.H. Rieke, E. Egami, C.P. Haines, M.J. Pereira, G. P. Smith

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between luminous active galactic nuclei (AGNs) and star formation in their host galaxies, revealing correlations that may be driven by galaxy mass rather than direct causality.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the connection between AGN activity and star formation, using spectral energy distribution decomposition to estimate key galaxy properties.
Findings
Star formation rates in AGN hosts are similar to normal star-forming galaxies.
A strong correlation exists between star formation luminosity and AGN luminosity.
The correlation may be due to both being linked to galaxy mass, not direct causation.
Abstract
We study the relation of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) to star formation in their host galaxies. Our sample includes 205 Type-1 and 85 Type-2 AGNs, 162 detected with Herschel, from fields surrounding 30 galaxy clusters in the Local Cluster Substructure Survey (LoCuSS). The sample is identified by optical line widths and ratios after selection to be brighter than 1 mJy at 24 microns. We show that Type-2 AGN [OIII]5007 line fluxes at high z can be contaminated by their host galaxies with typical spectrograph entrance apertures (but our sample is not compromised in this way). We use spectral energy distribution (SED) templates to decompose the galaxy SEDs and estimate star formation rates, AGN luminosities, and host galaxy stellar masses (described in an accompanying paper). The AGNs arise from massive black holes (~ 3 X 10^8 Msun) accreting at ~ 10% of the Eddington rate and residing in…
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