The Evolution of AGN Activity in Brightest Cluster Galaxies
T. Somboonpanyakul, M. McDonald, A. Noble, M. Aguena, S. Allam, A., Amon, F. Andrade-Oliveira, D. Bacon, M. B. Bayliss, E. Bertin, S. Bhargava,, D. Brooks, E. Buckley-Geer, D. L. Burke, M. Calzadilla, R. Canning, A., Carnero Rosell, M. Carrasco Kind, J. Carretero

TL;DR
This study analyzes WISE infrared data to show that the fraction of brightest cluster galaxies hosting active galactic nuclei increases significantly with redshift, indicating more gas-rich mergers at earlier cosmic times.
Contribution
It introduces a new method for identifying AGNs in BCGs using WISE mid-infrared colors and quantifies the redshift evolution of AGN activity in BCGs.
Findings
AGN-hosting BCG fraction increases with redshift as (1+z)^(4.1±1.0)
High-redshift BCGs likely merge with gas-rich satellites, fueling AGNs
Most BCGs have low black hole accretion rates, inconsistent with classical cooling flow models
Abstract
We present the results of an analysis of Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) observations on the full 2500 deg^2 South Pole Telescope (SPT)-SZ cluster sample. We describe a process for identifying active galactic nuclei (AGN) in brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) based on WISE mid-infrared color and redshift. Applying this technique to the BCGs of the SPT-SZ sample, we calculate the AGN-hosting BCG fraction, which is defined as the fraction of BCGs hosting bright central AGNs over all possible BCGs. Assuming {\bf an evolving} single-burst stellar population model, we find statistically significant evidence (>99.9%) for a mid-IR excess at high redshift compared to low redshift, suggesting that the fraction of AGN-hosting BCGs increases with redshift over the range of 0 < z < 1.3. The best-fit redshift trend of the AGN-hosting BCG fraction has the form (1+z)^(4.1+/-1.0). These…
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