The Incidence of X-ray selected AGN in Nearby Galaxies
Keir L. Birchall, M. G. Watson, J. Aird, R. L. C. Starling

TL;DR
This study identifies and analyzes a large, unbiased sample of nearby galaxies hosting X-ray selected AGN, revealing their incidence, accretion rates, and dependence on stellar mass and redshift.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of local AGN incidence and accretion properties using combined X-ray and optical data, with improved AGN identification techniques.
Findings
AGN incidence is roughly constant at 1% across a wide stellar mass range.
Most AGN accrete at rates below 0.5% of their Eddington luminosity.
The AGN fraction increases with redshift, from 1% to 10%.
Abstract
We present the identification and analysis of an unbiased sample of AGN that lie within the local galaxy population. Using the MPA-JHU catalogue (based on SDSS DR8) and 3XMM DR7 we define a parent sample of 25,949 local galaxies (). After confirming that there was strictly no AGN light contaminating stellar mass and star-formation rate calculations, we identified 917 galaxies with central, excess X-ray emission likely originating from an AGN. We analysed their optical emission lines using the BPT diagnostic and confirmed that such techniques are more effective at reliably identifying sources as AGN in higher mass galaxies: rising from 30% agreement in the lowest mass bin to 93% in the highest. We then calculated the growth rates of the black holes powering these AGN in terms of their specific accretion rates (). Our sample exhibits a wide range of accretion…
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