Cosmic evolution of the incidence of Active Galactic Nuclei in massive clusters: Simulations versus observations
Iv\'an Mu\~noz Rodr\'iguez, Antonis Georgakakis, Francesco Shankar,, Viola Allevato, Silvia Bonoli, Marcella Brusa, Andrea Lapi, Akke Viitanen

TL;DR
This study compares simulations and observations to understand how small-scale environments in massive galaxy clusters influence the activity of supermassive black holes over cosmic time, revealing environment-dependent effects on AGN incidence.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-empirical model to predict AGN fractions in clusters and tests its assumptions against observational data across redshifts.
Findings
Model underpredicts AGN at high redshift and high luminosity.
Model overestimates moderate luminosity AGN at low redshift.
Environmental effects on AGN activity are redshift-dependent.
Abstract
This paper explores the role of small-scale environment ( Mpc) in modulating accretion events onto supermassive black holes by studying the incidence of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) in massive clusters of galaxies. A flexible, data-driven semi-empirical model is developed based on a minimal set of parameters and under the zero order assumption that the incidence of AGN in galaxies is independent of environment. This is used to predict how the fraction of X-ray selected AGN among galaxies in massive dark matter halos () evolves with redshift and reveal tensions with observations. At high redshift, , the model underpredicts AGN fractions, particularly at high X-ray luminosities, . At low redshift, , the model estimates fractions of moderate luminosity AGN ($L_X(\rm 2-10\,keV)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
