Variability-selected AGN in dwarf galaxies: the incidence of AGN in dwarf and massive galaxies is similar
S. Kaviraj, D. De Cicco, I. Lazar, B. Bichang'a, A. E. Watkins, G. Martin, S. Koudmani

TL;DR
This study identifies optical variability-selected AGN in dwarf galaxies, revealing that the incidence rate of AGN in dwarf and massive galaxies is comparable, challenging previous assumptions about AGN prevalence in low-mass galaxies.
Contribution
It demonstrates the effectiveness of optical variability in detecting AGN in dwarf galaxies and compares their incidence with massive galaxies, providing new insights into AGN demographics.
Findings
AGN incidence in dwarfs and massive galaxies is similar within a factor of 2.
Dwarf AGN hosts are more often early-type galaxies.
AGN triggering is not strongly environment-dependent.
Abstract
We use the VST-COSMOS survey to identify, via their optical broadband variability, 30 AGN in nearby (z<0.4) dwarf (10^8 MSun < M < 10^10 MSun) galaxies. VST-COSMOS offers a 1 deg^2 survey footprint, a single visit depth of 24.6 mag and 68 r-band visits spanning an eleven-year temporal baseline. Compared to a control sample matched in stellar mass and redshift, the dwarf AGN population shows an elevated fraction of early-type galaxies but a similar fraction of interacting objects, suggesting that interactions do not play a significant role in triggering these AGN. Dwarf AGN hosts do not show strong differences in their distances to nodes, filaments and massive galaxies compared to the controls, which indicates that AGN triggering, at least in this sample, is not strongly correlated with environment. Finally, by combining the true number of galaxies, the detectability of AGN and the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Technology and Applications
