Despite the importance of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) in galaxy evolution, the mechanisms that fuel AGN activity remain poorly understood. Theoretical models suggest that major mergers of galaxies contribute strongly to AGN fuelling, particularly at high AGN luminosities. The connection between mergers and AGN activity has therefore been widely studied, although with contradictory results. Some studies find a strong connection between mergers and AGN, while others find merger fractions in AGN hosts to match those in the inactive galaxy population. To address these apparent contradictions, I present a complete and systematic analysis of detected merger fractions in AGN hosts from the literature. I assess if discrepancies between studies are indicative of systematic uncertainties and biases and analyse the detected merger fraction as a function of luminosity, redshift, and AGN selection method. X-ray selected AGN samples show comparable detected merger fractions across studies and major mergers do not dominate triggering in this AGN population. On the other hand, signatures of significant merger contribution to the AGN population are observed in a small fraction of primarily radio selected and reddened AGN samples. It is unclear if this is due to observational biases or physical differences in the host galaxies. There is no correlation between the detected merger fraction and AGN luminosity. This lack of correlation between detected merger fraction and AGN luminosity, which has previously been reported in the literature, cannot be explained by systematic uncertainties and observational biases.
CITATION STYLE
Villforth, C. (2023). A COMPLETE CATALOGUE OF MERGER FRACTIONS IN AGN HOSTS: NO EVIDENCE FOR AN INCREASE IN DETECTED MERGER FRACTION WITH AGN LUMINOSITY. Open Journal of Astrophysics, 6. https://doi.org/10.21105/astro.2309.03276
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