The XXL survey XXXV. The role of cluster mass in AGN activity
E. Koulouridis, M. Ricci, P. Giles, C. Adami, M. Ramos-Ceja, M., Pierre, M. Plionis, C. Lidman, I. Georgantopoulos, L. Chiappetti, A. Elyiv,, S. Ettori, L. Faccioli, S. Fotopoulou, F. Gastaldello, F. Pacaud, S. Paltani,, C. Vignali

TL;DR
This study investigates how the fraction of X-ray active galactic nuclei (AGNs) in galaxy clusters varies with cluster mass and radius, revealing that lower-mass clusters have higher AGN activity in their outskirts, influenced by galaxy mergers.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of AGN demographics as a function of cluster mass and radius in a homogeneous sample of galaxy clusters at intermediate redshift.
Findings
Low-mass clusters show a significant excess of AGNs in their outskirts.
High-mass clusters have decreasing AGN fractions towards their centers.
AGN fraction increases with redshift, similar to field galaxies.
Abstract
We present the results of a study of the AGN density in a homogeneous and well-studied sample of 167 bona fide X-ray galaxy clusters () from the XXL Survey. The results can provide evidence of the physical mechanisms that drive AGN and galaxy evolution within clusters. The XXL cluster sample mostly comprises poor and moderately rich structures (). Our aim is to statistically study the demographics of cluster AGNs as a function of cluster mass and host galaxy position. To investigate the effect of the environment on AGN activity, we computed the fraction of spectroscopically confirmed X-ray AGNs ( erg cm) in bright cluster galaxies, up to radius. To study the mass dependence and the evolution of the AGN population, we further divided the sample into low- and high-mass clusters and two…
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