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LLAMA: Stellar populations in the nuclei of ultra hard X-ray selected AGN and matched inactive galaxies

Authors :
Taro Shimizu
Marc Schartmann
E. K. S. Hicks
Rogério Riffel
Richard Davies
David J. Rosario
Rogemar A. Riffel
Thaisa Storchi-Bergmann
Allan Schnorr-Müller
Leonard Burtscher
Ming-yi Lin
G. Orban de Xivry
Sylvain Veilleux
Source :
Repositório Institucional da UFRGS, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), instacron:UFRGS, Astronomy & Astrophysics, 654
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The relation between nuclear ($\lesssim$ 50 pc) star formation and nuclear galactic activity is still elusive: theoretical models predict a link between the two, but it is unclear whether active galactic nuclei (AGNs) should appear at the same time, before or after nuclear star formation activity is ongoing. We present a study of this relation in a complete, volume-limited sample of nine of the most luminous ($\log L_{\rm 14-195 keV} > 10^{42.5}$ erg/s) local AGNs (the LLAMA sample), including a sample of 18 inactive control galaxies (6 star-forming; 12 passive) that are matched by Hubble type, stellar mass (9.5 $\lesssim$ log M_star/M_sun $\lesssim$ 10.5), inclination and distance. This allows us to calibrate our methods on the control sample and perform a differential analysis between the AGN and control samples. We perform stellar population synthesis on VLT/X-SHOOTER spectra in an aperture corresponding to a physical radius of $\approx$ 150 pc. We find young ($\lesssim$ 30 Myr) stellar populations in seven out of nine AGNs and in four out of six star-forming control galaxies. In the non-star-forming control population, in contrast, only two out of twelve galaxies show such a population. We further show that these young populations are not indicative of ongoing star-formation, providing evidence for models that see AGN activity as a consequence of nuclear star formation. Based on the similar nuclear star-formation histories of AGNs and star-forming control galaxies, we speculate that the latter may turn into the former for some fraction of their time. Under this assumption, and making use of the volume-completeness of our sample, we infer that the AGN phase lasts for about 5 % of the nuclear starburst phase.<br />53 pages, 44 figures, accepted for publication by A&A

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Repositório Institucional da UFRGS, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), instacron:UFRGS, Astronomy & Astrophysics, 654
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....50de80657dab769285336e16082bb1d7