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The role of scatter and satellites in shaping the large-scale clustering of X-ray AGN as a function of host galaxy stellar mass

The role of scatter and satellites in shaping the large-scale clustering of X-ray AGN as a function of host galaxy stellar mass
The role of scatter and satellites in shaping the large-scale clustering of X-ray AGN as a function of host galaxy stellar mass
The co-evolution between central supermassive black holes (BH), their host galaxies, and dark matter halos is still a matter of intense debate. Present theoretical models suffer from large uncertainties and degeneracies, for example, between the fraction of accreting sources and their characteristic accretion rate. In recent work we showed that Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) clustering represents a powerful tool to break degeneracies when analysed in terms of mean BH mass, and that AGN bias at fixed stellar mass is largely independent of most of the input parameters, such as the AGN duty cycle and the mean scaling between BH mass and host galaxy stellar mass. In this paper we take advantage of our improved semi-empirical methodology and recent clustering data derived from large AGN samples at $z \sim 1.2$, demonstrate that the AGN bias as a function of host galaxy stellar mass is a crucial diagnostic of the BH--galaxy connection, and is highly dependent on the scatter around the BH mass--galaxy mass scaling relation and on the relative fraction of satellite and central active BHs. Current data at $z \sim 1.2$ favour relatively high values of AGN in satellites, pointing to a major role of disc instabilities in triggering AGN, unless a high minimum host halo mass is assumed. The data are not decisive on the magnitude/covariance of the BH-galaxy scatter at $z \sim 1.2$ and intermediate host masses $M_\mathrm{star} \lesssim 10^{11} \,\mathrm{M}_\odot$. However, future surveys like Euclid/LSST will be pivotal in shedding light on the BH--galaxy co-evolution.
astro-ph.GA
1365-2966
6148-6160
Viitanen, A.
4c59801d-39fe-4b75-89cd-14bf27e5950a
Allevato, V.
e74ca535-ee08-485b-a961-09c8376668c2
Finoguenov, A.
115a1a3d-bc40-4655-b77d-3fa8fb4318d2
Shankar, F.
b10c91e4-85cd-4394-a18a-d4f049fd9cdb
Marsden, C.
ccd1ecc8-3eb4-4699-a87e-0bfba0dd40b0
Viitanen, A.
4c59801d-39fe-4b75-89cd-14bf27e5950a
Allevato, V.
e74ca535-ee08-485b-a961-09c8376668c2
Finoguenov, A.
115a1a3d-bc40-4655-b77d-3fa8fb4318d2
Shankar, F.
b10c91e4-85cd-4394-a18a-d4f049fd9cdb
Marsden, C.
ccd1ecc8-3eb4-4699-a87e-0bfba0dd40b0

Viitanen, A., Allevato, V., Finoguenov, A., Shankar, F. and Marsden, C. (2021) The role of scatter and satellites in shaping the large-scale clustering of X-ray AGN as a function of host galaxy stellar mass. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 507 (4), 6148-6160. (doi:10.1093/mnras/stab2538).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The co-evolution between central supermassive black holes (BH), their host galaxies, and dark matter halos is still a matter of intense debate. Present theoretical models suffer from large uncertainties and degeneracies, for example, between the fraction of accreting sources and their characteristic accretion rate. In recent work we showed that Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) clustering represents a powerful tool to break degeneracies when analysed in terms of mean BH mass, and that AGN bias at fixed stellar mass is largely independent of most of the input parameters, such as the AGN duty cycle and the mean scaling between BH mass and host galaxy stellar mass. In this paper we take advantage of our improved semi-empirical methodology and recent clustering data derived from large AGN samples at $z \sim 1.2$, demonstrate that the AGN bias as a function of host galaxy stellar mass is a crucial diagnostic of the BH--galaxy connection, and is highly dependent on the scatter around the BH mass--galaxy mass scaling relation and on the relative fraction of satellite and central active BHs. Current data at $z \sim 1.2$ favour relatively high values of AGN in satellites, pointing to a major role of disc instabilities in triggering AGN, unless a high minimum host halo mass is assumed. The data are not decisive on the magnitude/covariance of the BH-galaxy scatter at $z \sim 1.2$ and intermediate host masses $M_\mathrm{star} \lesssim 10^{11} \,\mathrm{M}_\odot$. However, future surveys like Euclid/LSST will be pivotal in shedding light on the BH--galaxy co-evolution.

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Accepted/In Press date: 6 September 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 9 September 2021
Additional Information: 14 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
Keywords: astro-ph.GA

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502389
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502389
ISSN: 1365-2966
PURE UUID: efdf3777-a49e-48c7-99b9-ced45e4ad593

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Date deposited: 24 Jun 2025 16:50
Last modified: 21 Aug 2025 05:19

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Contributors

Author: A. Viitanen
Author: V. Allevato
Author: A. Finoguenov
Author: F. Shankar
Author: C. Marsden

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