Comparative analysis of the SFR of AGN and non-AGN galaxies, as a function of stellar mass, AGN power, cosmic time and obscuration
G. Mountrichas, V. A. Masoura, A. Corral, F. J. Carrera

TL;DR
This study compares star formation rates of AGN and non-AGN galaxies across various parameters, revealing that AGN generally have higher SFRs, with distinctions between type 1 and type 2 AGN evolving with redshift.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of SFR differences between AGN and non-AGN galaxies, including a classification of AGN types and their SFR behavior over cosmic time.
Findings
AGN show higher SFRs than non-AGN galaxies beyond certain X-ray luminosity thresholds.
Type 1 AGN have higher SFRs than type 2 AGN at z<1, but similar SFRs at higher redshifts.
SFR increases less steeply with stellar mass in AGN hosts compared to non-AGN galaxies.
Abstract
This study involves a comparative analysis of the SFRs of AGN and non-AGN galaxies and of the SFRs of type 1 and 2 AGN. To carry out this investigation, we assembled a dataset consisting of 2\,677 X-ray AGN detected by the XMM-Newton observatory and a control sample of 64\,556 galaxies devoid of AGN. We generated SEDs for these objects using photometric data from the DES, VHS, and AllWISE surveys, and we harnessed the CIGALE code to extract measurements for the (host) galaxy properties. Our dataset encompasses sources spanning a range from , , and . To compare SFRs, we calculated the SFR parameter. Our analysis revealed that AGN tend to exhibit elevated SFRs compared to non-AGN galaxies, particularly beyond a certain threshold in L. Notably, this threshold increases as we move…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
