AGN accretion and black hole growth across compact and extended galaxy evolution phases
James Aird, Alison L. Coil, Dale D. Kocevski

TL;DR
This study investigates how black hole growth and AGN activity vary across different galaxy evolution phases, revealing that significant black hole growth occurs mainly in extended quiescent galaxies rather than compact star-forming ones.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the relationship between galaxy structure, star formation activity, and black hole growth across cosmic time.
Findings
AGN fraction is higher in extended quiescent galaxies (~10-30%)
Black hole growth is not dominant during the compact star-forming phase
AGN activity correlates with galaxy compactness and evolutionary state
Abstract
The extent of black hole growth during different galaxy evolution phases and the connection between galaxy compactness and AGN activity remain poorly understood. We use Hubble Space Telescope imaging of the CANDELS fields to identify star-forming and quiescent galaxies at z=0.5-3 in both compact and extended phases and use Chandra X-ray imaging to measure the distribution of AGN accretion rates and track black hole growth within these galaxies. Accounting for the impact of AGN light changes ~20% of the X-ray sources from compact to extended galaxy classifications. We find that ~10-25% of compact star-forming galaxies host an AGN, a mild enhancement (by a factor ~2) compared to extended star-forming galaxies or compact quiescent galaxies of equivalent stellar mass and redshift. However, AGN are not ubiquitous in compact star-forming galaxies and this is not the evolutionary phase, given…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
