The major merger-active galactic nucleus connection up to the cosmic noon
Abstract
Galaxy major mergers are a potential mechanism for triggering active galactic nuclei (AGN) activity, but their role remains debated, particularly beyond the local Universe. We aim to shed light on the merger-AGN connection at z=0.5-2, exploiting the multi-wavelength datasets and James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) observations in the COSMOS field. We construct a stellar mass-limited sample and identify AGN via mid-infrared (MIR) colours, X-ray detections, and spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting. We train convolutional neural networks to identify mergers with mock JWST observations. We create non-AGN and non-merger control samples matching the redshift, stellar mass, and star-formation rate distributions of the AGN and mergers. We find AGN to be moderately more frequent in mergers than in non-mergers, with excess ratios ranging from 2.5 (X-ray AGN) to 1.3 (MIR) and 1.1-1.2 (SED AGN). Similarly, AGN galaxies show a higher merger fraction (fmerg) than non-AGN controls. We then study fmerg as a function of relative and absolute AGN power, utilising the AGN fraction (fAGN) and accretion disc luminosity (Ldisc) parameters. We uncover a fmerg-fAGN relation with two regimes: fmerg stays roughly flat for less-dominant AGN (fAGN<0.8) but increases at fAGN>0.8 for the MIR and X-ray AGN, and more gently for SED AGN, where mergers appear to be the main triggering mechanism. Additionally, fmerg increases monotonically as a function of Ldisc, for all AGN types, reaching fmerg>50\% for the most luminous AGN (Ldisc 1046\,erg\,s-1). Overall, our results suggest that major mergers can trigger AGN out to the cosmic noon at z2. Furthermore, the role of major mergers shows a clear dependence on AGN luminosity and remains the principal mechanism for fuelling the most powerful AGN.
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