The relation of cosmic environment and morphology with the star formation and stellar populations of AGN and non-AGN galaxies
G. Mountrichas, G. Yang, V. Buat, B. Darvish, M. Boquien, Q. Ni, D., Burgarella, L. Ciesla

TL;DR
This study investigates how cosmic environment and galaxy morphology influence star formation and stellar populations in AGN and non-AGN galaxies, revealing environment-dependent differences linked to galaxy activity and structure.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of star formation and stellar populations in AGN and non-AGN galaxies across different cosmic environments, highlighting the role of mergers and environment in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Isolated AGN have lower SFR than non-AGN.
Moderate L_X AGN and non-AGN have similar SFR in dense environments.
Non-AGN galaxies in dense environments have older stellar populations.
Abstract
In this work, we study the relation of cosmic environment and morphology with the star-formation (SF) and the stellar population of galaxies. Most importantly, we examine if this relation differs for systems with active and non-active supermassive black holes. For that purpose, we use 551 X-ray detected active galactic nuclei (AGN) and 16,917 non-AGN galaxies in the COSMOS-Legacy survey, for which the surface-density field measurements are available. The sources lie at redshift of , probe X-ray luminosities of and have stellar masses, . Our results show that isolated AGN (field) have lower SFR compared to non AGN, at all L spanned by our sample. However, in denser environments (filaments, clusters), moderate L AGN () and non-AGN galaxies have…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
