AGN host galaxy mass function in COSMOS: is AGN feedback responsible for the mass-quenching of galaxies?
A. Bongiorno, A. Schulze, A. Merloni, G. Zamorani, O. Ilbert, F. La, Franca, Y. Peng, E. Piconcelli, V. Mainieri, J. D. Silverman, M. Brusa, F., Fiore, M. Salvato, N. Scoville

TL;DR
This study analyzes the distribution of AGN host galaxy masses and accretion rates up to redshift 2.5, suggesting luminous AGN feedback may be key in galaxy mass-quenching at high masses.
Contribution
It provides a joint modeling of the host galaxy mass function and accretion rate distribution, linking AGN activity to galaxy quenching mechanisms.
Findings
AGN host galaxy mass function resembles the stellar mass function.
The ratio of AGN hosts to star-forming galaxies remains ~10% up to M*~10^11.5 Msun.
Luminous AGN feedback likely contributes to galaxy quenching at high masses.
Abstract
We investigate the role of supermassive black holes in the global context of galaxy evolution by measuring the host galaxy stellar mass function (HGMF) and the specific accretion rate i.e., lambda_SAR, distribution function (SARDF) up to z~2.5 with ~1000 X-ray selected AGN from XMM-COSMOS. Using a maximum likelihood approach, we jointly fit the stellar mass function and specific accretion rate distribution function, with the X-ray luminosity function as an additional constraint. Our best fit model characterizes the SARDF as a double power-law with mass dependent but redshift independent break whose low lambda_SAR slope flattens with increasing redshift while the normalization increases. This implies that, for a given stellar mass, higher lambda_SAR objects have a peak in their space density at earlier epoch compared to the lower lambda_SAR ones, following and mimicking the well known…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
