Abstract
We map the co-eval growth of galaxies and their central supermassive black
holes in detail by measuring the incidence of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) in
galaxies as a function of star formation rate (SFR) and redshift (to z~4). We
combine large galaxy samples with deep Chandra X-ray imaging to measure the
probability distribution of specific black hole accretion rates (LX relative to
stellar mass) and derive robust AGN fractions and average specific accretion
rates. First, we consider galaxies along the main sequence of star formation.
We find a linear correlation between the average SFR and both the AGN fraction
and average specific accretion rate across a wide range in stellar mass ($M_*
10^8.5-11.5M_ødot$) and to at least z~2.5, indicating that AGN in
main-sequence galaxies are driven by the stochastic accretion of cold gas. We
also consider quiescent galaxies and find significantly higher AGN fractions
than predicted, given their low SFRs, indicating that AGN in quiescent galaxies
are fuelled by additional mechanisms (e.g. stellar winds). Next, we bin
galaxies according to their SFRs relative to the main sequence. We find that
the AGN fraction is significantly elevated for galaxies that are still
star-forming but with SFRs below the main sequence, indicating further
triggering mechanisms enhance AGN activity within these sub-main-sequence
galaxies. We also find that the incidence of high-accretion-rate AGN is
enhanced in starburst galaxies and evolves more mildly with redshift than
within the rest of the galaxy population, suggesting mergers play a role in
driving AGN activity in such high-SFR galaxies.
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