X-Ray Evolution of Active Galactic Nuclei and Hierarchical Galaxy Formation

Abstract

We have incorporated the description of the X-ray properties of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGNs) into a semi-analytic model of galaxy formation, adopting physically motivated scaling laws for accretion triggered by galaxy encounters. Our model reproduces the level of the cosmic X-ray background at 30 keV; we predict that the largest contribution (around 2/3) comes from sources with intermediate X-ray luminosity 1043.5< LX/erg/s <1044.5, with 50 % of the total specific intensity produced at z<2. The predicted number density of luminous X-ray AGNs (LX>1044.5 erg/s in the 2-10 keV band) peaks at z around 2 with a decline of around 3 dex to z=0; for the low luminosity sources (1043<LX/erg/s <1044) it has a broaderand less pronounced maximum around z 1.5. The comparison with the data shows a generally good agreement. The model predictions slightly exceed the observed number of low-luminosity AGNs at z around 1.5, with the discrepancy progressively extending to intermediate-luminosity objects at higher redshifts; we discuss possible origins for the mismatch. Finally, we predict the source counts and the flux distribution at different redshifts in the hard (20-100 keV) X-ray band for the sources contributing to the X- ray background.

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