American Astronomical Society meeting
Transcription
American Astronomical Society meeting
Co-evolving star formation and AGN activity within the zCOSMOS density field John Silverman (ETH-Zurich) zCOSMOS: S. Lilly (ETH), F. Lamareille (Toulouse), K. Kovac (ETH), V. Mainieri (ESO), G. Zamorani (INAF-Bologna), O. Le Fevre (LAM-Marseille), T. Contini (LATT-Toulouse), M. Bolzonella (INAFBologna), M. Scodeggio (INAF-Milan) & other zCOSMOS members XMM/COSMOS: G. Hasinger (MPE), M. Brusa (MPE), V. Mainieri (ESO), Nico Cappelluti (MPE), A. Finoguenov (MPE), H. Brunner (MPE), A. Comastri (INAF-Bologna), R. Gilli (INAF-Bologna), C. Vignali (INAF-Bologna) & others & COSMOS What drives the concurrent growth of supermassive black holes and their host galaxy? • Major mergers of galaxies Di Matteo et al. 2005, Springel et al. 2005, Croton et al. 2006, Hopkins et al. 2008 SFRs (data points): Hopkins, A. et al. 2004, Bouwens et al. 2007 • Internal processs (e.g., bar/disk instabilities, stellar ejecta) Kormendy & Kennicutt 2004, Davies et al. 2007, Hopkins et al. 2008 • Availability of gas/stochastic processes Scoville et al. 2003, Kaufmann et al. 2007, Constantin et al. 2008, Ho et al. 2008, Hopkins et al. 2008 Accretion rate density of AGN*5000 Approach: How closely is SFR and Maccr related in galaxies hosting AGN? Does environment play a role? If so, on what scale? Silverman et al. 2008a, ApJ, 679, 118 See also Boyle & Terlevich 1998, Franceschini, Hasinger & Miyaji 1999, Merloni, Rudnick, Di Matteo 2004, Marconi et al. 2004, Shankar et al. 2008 ETH-Zurich, Bologna, Milan, Marseille, Toulouse, ESO/MPE zCOSMOS (PI: S. Lilly) 10k VLT/VIMOS spectra (IAB<22.5) 1.7 deg2 5500-9600 Å z<1.2 ~50% completion ‘bright program’ XMM/COSMOS (PI: G. Hasigner) 7543 galaxies 152 AGN L0.5-10 keV>1042 erg s-1 1848 point sources (Cappelluti et al. 2007, Brusa et al. 2007) Star formation rates of AGN hosts [OII]λ3727 as a SFR indicator (Ho et al. 2005) • Automated routine zCOSMOS AGN - spectral measurements (Lamareille et al. 2008, 2009-in preparation) • Removal of AGN contribution: - [OIII]λ5007 purely AGN dominated (Kauffmann et al. 2003) - [OII]AGN/[OIII]AGN=0.2 (Kim et al. 2006) - AV=0.8 (Kewley et al. 2006) - At z>0.85, infer [OIII] from correlation with L2-10 keV (Heckman et al. 2005, Panessa et al. 2006) SDSS type 1AGN • log SFR = log L[OII] - 41 -0.2*MB-3.43 (Moustakis et al. 2006) Silverman, Lamareille et al. 2009a, ApJ in press arXiv:0810.3653 Results: • ~1< SFR < 100 M⊙ yr-1 • Similar evolution to star-forming galaxies • Evolution consistent with low SFRs in SDSS AGNs (z < 0.3) Star formation rates of AGN hosts [OII]λ3727 as a SFR indicator (Ho et al. 2005) • Automated routine - spectral measurements (Lamareille et al. 2008, 2009-in preparation) • Removal of AGN contribution: - [OIII]λ5007 purely AGN dominated (Kauffmann et al. 2003) - [OII]AGN/[OIII]AGN=0.2 (Kim et al. 2006) - AV=0.8 (Kewley et al. 2006) - At z>0.85, infer [OIII] from correlation with L2-10 keV (Heckman et al. 2005, Panessa et al. 2006) • log SFR = log L[OII] - 41 -0.2*MB-3.43 (Moustakis et al. 2006) Silverman, Lamareille et al. 2009a, ApJ in press arXiv:0810.3653 Results: • ~1< SFR < 100 M⊙ yr-1 • Similar evolution to star-forming galaxies • Evolution consistent with low SFRs in SDSS AGNs (z < 0.3) Co-evolution of SMBHs and their host galaxies Silverman, Lamareille et al. 2009a, ApJ in press, arXiv:0810.3653 • Constant ratio with redshift A factor of 10x higher than MBH-Mbulge relation • <Maccr/SFR> ~ 10-2 • Intermittant scenario with an AGN duty cycle 10x shorter than star formation Conclusions and further remarks levels of star formation (1-100 M⊙ yr-1) in zCOSMOS galaxies hosting AGN - effectively extends SDSS results (Kaufmann et al. 2003, 2007) up to z ~1 - no evidence for quenching attributed to AGN feedback or time delays • Substantial •Mutual decline in star formation and supermassive black hole accretion - shifting a co-evolution scenario to smaller physical scales (i.e., within the same galaxies) • Intermittant SMBH growth on time scales ~108 yr What about their environments? • AGNs reside in environments similar to star-forming galaxies Silverman, Kovac, Knobel, Lilly et al. 2009b, ApJ in press, arXiv:0812.3402 a short movie ... K. Kovac,Y. Peng