Hosts and triggers of AGNs in the Local Universe
Ziwen Zhang, Huiyuan Wang, Wentao Luo, H.J. Mo, Zhixiong Liang, Ran, Li, Xiaohu Yang, Tinggui Wang, Hongxin Zhang, Hui Hong, Xiaoyu Wang, Enci, Wang, Pengfei Li, JingJing Shi

TL;DR
This study investigates the environments and host galaxy properties of AGNs in the local universe, revealing their preference for specific evolutionary stages, typical halo masses, and the influence of satellite interactions on AGN activity.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the environmental factors and halo characteristics associated with AGNs, highlighting the role of satellite interactions and galaxy evolution stages.
Findings
AGNs are mainly found in star-burst and green valley phases.
Typical AGN host halo mass is about 10^{12}h^{-1} M_sun.
AGNs have more satellites than star-forming galaxies.
Abstract
Based on the spectroscopic and shear catalogs for SDSS galaxies in the local Universe, we compare optically-selected active galactic nuclei (AGNs) with control star-forming and quiescent galaxies on galactic, inter-halo and larger scales. We find that AGNs are preferentially found in two specific stages of galaxy evolution: star-burst and `green valley' phases, and that the stellar population of their host galaxies is quite independent of stellar mass, different from normal galaxies. Combining galaxy-galaxy lensing and galaxy clustering on large scales, we measure the mass of AGN host halos. The typical halo mass is about , similar to the characteristic mass in the stellar mass-halo mass relation (SHMR). For given stellar mass, AGN host galaxies and star-forming galaxies share the same SHMR, while quiescent galaxies have more massive halos. Clustering…
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