Measuring Star Formation and Black Hole Accretion Rates in Tandem using Mid-Infrared Spectra of Local Infrared-Luminous Galaxies
Meredith Stone (1), Alexandra Pope (1), Jed McKinney (1), Lee Armus, (2), Tanio D\'iaz-Santos (3), Hanae Inami (4), Allison Kirkpatrick (5),, Sabrina Stierwalt (6) ((1) University of Massachusetts Amherst, (2) Spitzer, Science Center, (3) Foundation for Research

TL;DR
This study uses mid-infrared spectra of local luminous infrared galaxies to simultaneously measure star formation and black hole accretion rates, revealing their relationship and the impact of AGN activity.
Contribution
It introduces a method to decompose [O IV] emission into star formation and AGN components, enabling more accurate black hole accretion rate estimates in LIRGs.
Findings
[Ne II] luminosity remains constant across AGN fractions.
[O IV] and [Ne V] luminosities increase with AGN activity.
BHAR/SFR ratio increases significantly with AGN fraction.
Abstract
We present the results of a stacking analysis performed on Spitzer/Infrared Spectrograph high-resolution mid-infrared spectra of luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs) in the Great Observatories All-Sky LIRG Survey (GOALS). By binning on mid-infrared active galactic nucleus (AGN) fraction and stacking spectra, we detect bright emission lines [Ne II] and [Ne III], which trace star formation, and fainter emission lines [Ne V] and [O IV], which trace AGN activity, throughout the sample. We find the [Ne II] luminosity is fairly constant across all AGN fraction bins, while the [O IV] and [Ne V] luminosities increase by over an order of magnitude. Our measured average line ratios, [Ne V]/[Ne II] and [O IV]/[Ne II], at low AGN fraction are similar to H II galaxies while the line ratios at high AGN fraction are similar to LINERs and Seyferts. We decompose the [O IV] luminosity into star-formation…
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