Are Active Galactic Nuclei in Post-Starburst Galaxies Driving the Change or Along for the Ride?
Lauranne Lanz, Sofia Stepanoff, Ryan C. Hickox, Katherine Alatalo, K., Decker French, Kate Rowlands, Kristina Nyland, Phil Appleton, Mark Lacy, Anne, Medling, John S. Mulchaey, Elizaveta Sazonova, Claudia Megan Urry

TL;DR
This study investigates X-ray observations of post-starburst galaxies to determine the presence and role of AGN activity during galaxy transition, finding most host low-luminosity or obscured AGN, suggesting they are likely along for the ride.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed X-ray analysis of shocked post-starburst galaxies, constraining AGN luminosity and obscuration, and assessing their role in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Most galaxies host low-luminosity or obscured AGN.
Two galaxies are clearly obscured AGN.
At least half show evidence of AGN activity.
Abstract
We present an analysis of 10 ks snapshot Chandra observations of 12 shocked post-starburst galaxies, which provide a window into the unresolved question of active galactic nuclei (AGN) activity in post-starburst galaxies and its role in the transition of galaxies from actively star forming to quiescence. While 7/12 galaxies have statistically significant detections (with 2 more marginal detections), the brightest only obtained 10 photons. Given the wide variety of hardness ratios in this sample, we chose to pursue a forward modeling approach to constrain the intrinsic luminosity and obscuration of these galaxies rather than stacking. We constrain intrinsic luminosity of obscured power-laws based on the total number of counts and spectral shape, itself mostly set by the obscuration, with hardness ratios consistent with the data. We also tested thermal models. While all the galaxies have…
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