Constraining AGN triggering mechanisms through the clustering analysis of active black holes
M. Gatti (1,2), F. Shankar (3), V. Bouillot (4), N. Menci (1), A., Lamastra (1), M. Hirschmann (5), F. Fiore (1) ((1) INAF - Osservatorio, Astronomico di Roma,(2) IFAE - Institut de Fisica d'Altes Energies, (3), University of Southampton, (4) University of Cape Town

TL;DR
This study uses advanced modeling to analyze how galaxy interactions and disk instabilities influence AGN clustering, revealing differences in triggering mechanisms and their observational signatures across scales and redshifts.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of galaxy interactions and disk instabilities as AGN triggers using semi-analytic models and clustering analysis, highlighting their distinct impacts.
Findings
Galaxy interactions better explain central AGN activity in massive halos.
Disk instabilities lead to higher satellite AGN fractions at lower luminosities.
Both scenarios show similar large-scale clustering, complicating observational discrimination.
Abstract
The triggering mechanisms for Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) are still debated. Some of the most popular ones include galaxy interactions (IT) and disk instabilities (DI). Using an advanced semi analytic model (SAM) of galaxy formation, coupled to accurate halo occupation distribution modeling, we investigate the imprint left by each separate triggering process on the clustering strength of AGN at small and large scales. Our main results are as follows: i) DIs, irrespective of their exact implementation in the SAM, tend to fall short in triggering AGN activity in galaxies at the center of halos with . On the contrary, the IT scenario predicts abundance of active, central galaxies that generally agrees well with observations at every halo mass. ii) The relative number of satellite AGN in DIs at intermediate-to-low luminosities is always significantly higher…
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