CANDELS: Elevated Black Hole Growth in the Progenitors of Compact Quiescent Galaxies at z~2
Dale D. Kocevski, Guillermo Barro, S.M. Faber, Avishai Dekel, Rachel, S. Somerville, Joshua A. Young, Christina C. Williams, Daniel H. McIntosh,, Antonis Georgakakis, Guenther Hasinger, Kirpal Nandra, Francesca Civano,, David M. Alexander, Omar Almaini, Christopher J. Conselice

TL;DR
This study finds a significantly higher fraction of AGN in compact star-forming galaxies at z~2, supporting models where black hole growth and galaxy quenching are interconnected during galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first large-sample evidence linking elevated black hole activity to the formation of compact quiescent galaxies at high redshift.
Findings
39.2% of cSFGs host AGN, 3.2 times higher than extended SFGs
AGN fraction peaks where rapid galaxy quenching occurs
Supports models of black hole growth driving galaxy quenching
Abstract
We examine the fraction of massive (), compact star-forming galaxies (cSFGs) that host an active galactic nucleus (AGN) at . These cSFGs are likely the direct progenitors of the compact quiescent galaxies observed at this epoch, which are the first population of passive galaxies to appear in large numbers in the early Universe. We identify cSFGs that host an AGN using a combination of Hubble WFC3 imaging and Chandra X-ray observations in four fields: the Chandra Deep Fields, the Extended Groth Strip, and the UKIDSS Ultra Deep Survey field. We find that \% (65/166) of cSFGs at host an X-ray detected AGN. This fraction is 3.2 times higher than the incidence of AGN in extended star-forming galaxies with similar masses at these redshifts. This difference is significant at the level. Our results are consistent with…
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