AGN and Star Formation at Cosmic Noon: Comparison of Data to Theoretical Models
Jonathan Florez, Shardha Jogee, Yuchen Guo, Sof\'ia A. Cora, Rainer, Weinberger, Romeel Dav\'e, Lars Hernquist, Mark Vogelsberger, Robin, Ciardullo, Steven L. Finkelstein, Caryl Gronwall, Lalitwadee Kawinwanichakij,, Gene C.K. Leung, Stephanie LaMassa, Casey Papovich

TL;DR
This study compares galaxy evolution models with empirical data at cosmic noon, revealing strengths and shortcomings in how they simulate the relationship between AGN activity and star formation.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of hydrodynamical and semi-analytical models against empirical observations, highlighting areas where models succeed or fail in reproducing galaxy properties.
Findings
SAG and IllustrisTNG qualitatively match the observed higher SFR in galaxies with high-luminosity AGN.
SAG overestimates the abundance of high-luminosity AGN by 10-100 times.
SIMBA predicts lower SFR in AGN-hosting galaxies and too many quenched AGN, indicating overly efficient feedback.
Abstract
In theoretical models of galaxy evolution, AGN and star formation (SF) activity are closely linked and AGN feedback is routinely invoked to regulate galaxy growth. In order to constrain such models, we compare the hydrodynamical simulations IllustrisTNG and SIMBA, and the semi-analytical model SAG to the empirical results on AGN and SF at cosmic noon () reported in Florez et al. (2020). The empirical results are based on a large mass-complete sample drawn from 93,307 galaxies with and without high X-ray luminosity AGN ( erg s), selected from a 11.8 deg area ( Gpc comoving volume at ). The main results of our comparisons are: (i) SAG and IllustrisTNG both qualitatively reproduce the empirical result that galaxies with high X-ray luminosity AGN have higher mean SFR, at a given stellar mass, than galaxies without…
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