1112.3970 (Jonathan R. Trump)
Jonathan R. Trump
We use a sample of active galaxies from the Cosmic Evolution Survey to show
that host galaxy morphology is tied to the accretion rate and X-ray obscuration
of its active galactic nucleus (AGN). Unobscured and rapidly accreting
broad-line AGNs are more likely to be in spheroid-dominated hosts than weak or
obscured AGNs, and obscured AGNs are more likely to have disturbed host
galaxies. Much of the disagreement in previous work on the AGN-merger
connection is likely due to each study probing AGNs with different obscuration
and accretion properties. Only obscured AGNs seem to merger-driven, while weak
AGNs are fed by stochastic processes in disks, and rapidly-accreting broad-line
AGNs require massive bulges. Our observed "unified model" for AGN hosts fits
with theoretical models for merger-driven AGN evolution, but is also consistent
with steady-state AGN activity.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1112.3970
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