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Discovery of a Candidate Binary Supermassive Black Hole in a Periodic Quasar from Circumbinary Accretion Variability

Authors :
Liao, Wei-Ting
Chen, Yu-Ching
Liu, Xin
Holgado, A. Miguel
Guo, Hengxiao
Gruendl, Robert
Morganson, Eric
Shen, Yue
Davis, Tamara
Kessler, Richard
Martini, Paul
McMahon, Richard G.
Allam, Sahar
Annis, James
Avila, Santiago
Banerji, Manda
Bechtol, Keith
Bertin, Emmanuel
Brooks, David
Buckley-Geer, Elizabeth
Rosell, Aurelio Carnero
Kind, Matias Carrasco
Carretero, Jorge
Castander, Francisco Javier
Cunha, Carlos
D'Andrea, Chris
da Costa, Luiz
Davis, Christopher
De Vicente, Juan
Desai, Shantanu
Diehl, H. Thomas
Doel, Peter
Eifler, Tim
Evrard, August
Flaugher, Brenna
Fosalba, Pablo
Frieman, Josh
Garcia-Bellido, Juan
Gaztanaga, Enrique
Glazebrook, Karl
Gruen, Daniel
Gschwend, Julia
Gutierrez, Gaston
Hartley, Will
Hollowood, Devon L.
Honscheid, Klaus
Hoyle, Ben
James, David
Krause, Elisabeth
Kuehn, Kyler
Lima, Marcos
Maia, Marcio
Marshall, Jennifer
Menanteau, Felipe
Miquel, Ramon
Malagón, Andrés Plazas
Roodman, Aaron
Sanchez, Eusebio
Scarpine, Vic
Schubnell, Michael
Serrano, Santiago
Smith, Mathew
Smith, R. Chris
Soares-Santos, Marcelle
Sobreira, Flavia
Suchyta, Eric
Swanson, Molly
Tarle, Gregory
Vikram, Vinu
Walker, Alistair
Collaboration, the DES
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 500, Issue 3, pp.4025-4041 (2021)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Binary supermassive black holes (BSBHs) are expected to be a generic byproduct from hierarchical galaxy formation. The final coalescence of BSBHs is thought to be the loudest gravitational wave (GW) siren, yet no confirmed BSBH is known in the GW-dominated regime. While periodic quasars have been proposed as BSBH candidates, the physical origin of the periodicity has been largely uncertain. Here we report discovery of a periodicity (P=1607$\pm$7 days) at 99.95% significance (with a global p-value of ~$10^{-3}$ accounting for the look elsewhere effect) in the optical light curves of a redshift 1.53 quasar, SDSS J025214.67-002813.7. Combining archival Sloan Digital Sky Survey data with new, sensitive imaging from the Dark Energy Survey, the total ~20-yr time baseline spans ~4.6 cycles of the observed 4.4-yr (restframe 1.7-yr) periodicity. The light curves are best fit by a bursty model predicted by hydrodynamic simulations of circumbinary accretion disks. The periodicity is likely caused by accretion rate modulation by a milli-parsec BSBH emitting GWs, dynamically coupled to the circumbinary accretion disk. A bursty hydrodynamic variability model is statistically preferred over a smooth, sinusoidal model expected from relativistic Doppler boost, a kinematic effect proposed for PG1302-102. Furthermore, the frequency dependence of the variability amplitudes disfavors Doppler boost, lending independent support to the circumbinary accretion variability hypothesis. Given our detection rate of one BSBH candidate from circumbinary accretion variability out of 625 quasars, it suggests that future large, sensitive synoptic surveys such as the Vera C. Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time may be able to detect hundreds to thousands of candidate BSBHs from circumbinary accretion with direct implications for Laser Interferometer Space Antenna.<br />Comment: Accepted to MNRAS, 17 pages, 9 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 500, Issue 3, pp.4025-4041 (2021)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2008.12317
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa3055