Galaxy Mergers in the Epoch of Reionization II: Major Merger-Triggered Star Formation and AGN Activities at $z =$ 4.5-8.5
Qiao Duan, Qiong Li, Christopher J. Conselice, Thomas Harvey, Duncan Austin, Nathan J. Adams, Leonardo Ferreira, Kenneth J. Duncan, James Trussler, Robert G. Pascalau, Rogier A. Windhorst, Benne W. Holwerda, Thomas J. Broadhurst, Dan Coe, Seth H. Cohen, Xiaojing Du

TL;DR
This study investigates the effects of galaxy mergers on star formation and AGN activity during the epoch of reionization (z=4.5-8.5) using JWST data, finding limited star formation enhancement but significant AGN excess in merging galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first observational evidence of AGN excess in galaxy mergers at high redshift and compares these findings with cosmological simulations, highlighting discrepancies in star formation predictions.
Findings
Star formation rate enhancement occurs only at separations less than 20 kpc.
No significant enhancement in specific star formation rate or stellar mass at larger separations.
AGN fraction in merging pairs is significantly higher than in non-merging galaxies.
Abstract
Galaxy mergers are a key driver of galaxy formation and evolution, including the triggering of AGN and star formation to a still unknown degree. We thus investigate the impact of galaxy mergers on star formation and AGN activity using a sample of 3,330 galaxies at from eight JWST fields (CEERS, JADES GOODS-S, NEP-TDF, NGDEEP, GLASS, El-Gordo, SMACS-0723, and MACS-0416), collectively covering an unmasked area of 189 arcmin. We focuses on star formation rate (SFR) enhancement, AGN fraction, and AGN excess in major merger () close-pair samples, defined by and projected separations kpc, compared to non-merger samples. We find that SFR enhancement occurs only at kpc, with values of dex and dex above the non-merger medians for and . No other statistically…
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