The clustering of X-ray selected AGN at z=0.1

Abstract

The clustering properties of moderate luminosity (LX = 1041 - 1044 \, erg \,s-1) X-ray selected AGN at z≈0.1 are explored. X-ray sources in the redshift interval 0.03<z<0.2 are selected from a serendipitous XMM survey of the SDSS footprint (XMM/SDSS) and are cross-correlated with the SDSS Main galaxy sample. The inferred X-ray AGN auto-correlation function is described by a power law with amplitude r0≈5\,h-1Mpc and slope γ≈2.0. The corresponding mass of the dark matter haloes that host X-ray AGN at z≈0.1 is ≈ 1013 \,h -1 \, M. Comparison with studies at higher redshift shows that this mass scale is characteristic of moderate luminosity X-ray AGN out to z≈ 1. Splitting the AGN sample by rest-frame color shows that X-ray sources in red hosts are more clustered than those associated with blue galaxies, in agreement with results at z≈1. We also find that the host galaxies of X-ray AGN have lower stellar masses compared to the typical central galaxy of a ≈ 1013 \,h -1 \, M dark matter halo. AGN hosts either have experienced less stellar mass growth compared to the average central galaxy of a ≈ 1013 \,h -1 \, M halo or a fraction of them are associated with satellite galaxies.

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