The Star-Formation Properties of the Observed and Simulated AGN Universe: BAT vs EAGLE
Thomas M. Jackson, D. J. Rosario, D. M. Alexander, J. Scholtz, Stuart, McAlpine, R. G. Bower

TL;DR
This study compares observed low-redshift AGN host galaxy properties from Swift-BAT with EAGLE simulations, finding good overall agreement but some discrepancies in stellar mass and specific star formation rates.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison between observed AGN host galaxies and EAGLE simulations, validating the simulation's ability to reproduce key properties and evolution of AGN hosts.
Findings
EAGLE reproduces SFR and X-ray luminosity distributions well.
Stellar masses in EAGLE are higher than observed by 0.2-0.4 dex.
Star formation is quenched during rapid black hole growth phases.
Abstract
In this paper we present data from 72 low redshift, hard X-ray selected AGN taken from the {\it Swift}-BAT 58 month catalogue. We utilise spectral energy distribution fitting to the optical to IR photometry in order to estimate host galaxy properties. We compare this observational sample to a volume and flux matched sample of AGN from the EAGLE hydrodynamical simulations in order to verify how accurately the simulations can reproduce observed AGN host galaxy properties. After correcting for the known +0.2 dex offset in the SFRs between EAGLE and previous observations, we find agreement in the SFR and X-ray luminosity distributions; however we find that the stellar masses in EAGLE are dex greater than the observational sample, which consequently leads to lower sSFRs. We compare these results to our previous study at high redshift, finding agreement in both the observations…
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