2013MNRAS.429.1827P


Query : 2013MNRAS.429.1827P

2013MNRAS.429.1827P - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 429, 1827-1839 (2013/February-3)

The drivers of AGN activity in galaxy clusters: AGN fraction as a function of mass and environment.

PIMBBLET K.A., SHABALA S.S., HAINES C.P., FRASER-McKELVIE A. and FLOYD D.J.E.

Abstract (from CDS):

We present an analysis of optical spectroscopically identified active galactic nuclei (AGN) down to a cluster magnitude of M{sstarf} + 1 in a sample of six self-similar Sloan Digital Sky Survey galaxy clusters at z ∼ 0.07. These clusters are specifically selected to lack significant substructure at bright limits in their central regions so that we are largely able to eliminate the local action of merging clusters on the frequency of AGN. We demonstrate that the AGN fraction increases significantly from the cluster centre to 1.5Rvirial, but tails off at larger radii. If only comparing the cluster core region to regions at ∼ 2Rvirial, no significant variation would be found. We compute the AGN fraction by mass and show that massive galaxies (log(stellarmass) > 10.7) are host to a systematically higher fraction of AGN than lower mass galaxies at all radii from the cluster centre. We attribute this deficit of AGN in the cluster centre to the changing mix of galaxy types with radius. We use the WHAN diagnostic to separate weak AGN from `retired' galaxies in which the main ionization mechanism comes from old stellar populations. These retired AGN are found at all radii, while the mass effect is much more pronounced: we find that massive galaxies are more likely to be in the retired class. Further, we show that our AGN have no special position inside galaxy clusters - they are neither preferentially located in the infall regions nor situated at local maxima of galaxy density as measured with Σ5. However, we find that the most powerful AGN (with [O iii] equivalent widths ←10 Å) reside at significant velocity offsets in the cluster, and this brings our analysis into agreement with previous work on X-ray-selected AGN. Our results suggest that if interactions with other galaxies are responsible for triggering AGN activity, the time lag between trigger and AGN enhancement must be sufficiently long to obfuscate the encounter site and wipe out the local galaxy density signal.

Abstract Copyright: © 2012 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society (2012)

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: active - galaxies: clusters: general - galaxies: evolution

Simbad objects: 9

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Number of rows : 9
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NAME ACO 901-902 Supercluster SCG 09 56 -10.0           ~ 124 1
2 ACO 1205 ClG 11 13 23.41 +02 30 42.8           ~ 71 0
3 ACO 1424 ClG 11 57 30.50 +05 05 24.5           ~ 65 0
4 NSC J124759-013950 ClG 12 48 07.32 -01 40 12.5           ~ 8 0
5 NSC J124857-015532 ClG 12 48 57.72 -01 55 32.8           ~ 2 0
6 ACO 1620 ClG 12 50 03.89 -01 32 26.7           ~ 54 0
7 ACO 1650 ClG 12 58 42.0 -01 45 45           ~ 304 0
8 ACO 1767 ClG 13 36 06.92 +59 10 34.3           ~ 172 0
9 ACO 2670 ClG 23 54 10.51 -10 23 06.8           ~ 352 0

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