Nuclear Activity is More Prevalent in Star-forming Galaxies

Berta, S.; Magnelli, B.; Nordon, R.; Lutz, D.; Wuyts, S.; Genzel, R.; Maiolino, R.; Popesso, P.; Alexander, D. M.; Bauer, F. E.; Brandt, W. N.; Saintonge, A.; Netzer, H.; Santini, P.; Tacconi, L.; Mullaney, J. R.; Rosario, D. J.

Germany, Italy, Israel, Chile, United States, United Kingdom

Abstract

We explore the question of whether low and moderate luminosity active galactic nuclei (AGNs) are preferentially found in galaxies that are undergoing a transition from active star formation (SF) to quiescence. This notion has been suggested by studies of the UV-optical colors of AGN hosts, which find them to be common among galaxies in the so-called Green Valley, a region of galaxy color space believed to be composed mostly of galaxies undergoing SF quenching. Combining the deepest current X-ray and Herschel/PACS far-infrared (FIR) observations of the two Chandra Deep Fields with redshifts, stellar masses, and rest-frame photometry derived from the extensive and uniform multi-wavelength data in these fields, we compare the rest-frame U - V color distributions and star formation rate distributions of AGNs and carefully constructed samples of inactive control galaxies. The UV-to-optical colors of AGNs are consistent with equally massive inactive galaxies at redshifts out to z ~ 2, but we show that such colors are poor tracers of SF. While the FIR distributions of both star-forming AGNs and star-forming inactive galaxies are statistically similar, we show that AGNs are preferentially found in star-forming host galaxies, or, in other words, AGNs are less likely to be found in weakly star-forming or quenched galaxies. We postulate that, among X-ray-selected AGNs of low and moderate accretion luminosities, the supply of cold gas primarily determines the accretion rate distribution of the nuclear black holes.

2013 The Astrophysical Journal
Herschel 108