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A large systematic search for close supermassive binary and rapidly recoiling black holes

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TLDR
In this paper, a systematic search for subparsec supermassive black hole (BH) binaries among z 0.7 Sloan Digital Sky Survey quasars was carried out, using spectroscopic principal component analysis to search for broad Hβ emission lines that are displaced from the quasar rest frame by |Δ v| 1000 km s−1.
Abstract
We have carried out a systematic search for subparsec supermassive black hole (BH) binaries among z 0.7 Sloan Digital Sky Survey quasars. These are predicted by models of supermassive BH and host galaxy coevolution, therefore their census and population properties constitute an important test of these models. In our working hypothesis, one of the two BHs accretes at a much higher rate than the other and carries with it the only broad emission line region of the system, making the system analogous to a single-lined spectroscopic binary star. Accordingly, we used spectroscopic principal component analysis to search for broad Hβ emission lines that are displaced from the quasar rest frame by |Δ v| 1000 km s–1. This method also yields candidates for rapidly recoiling BHs. Of the 88 candidates, several were previously reported in the literature. We found a correlation between the peak offset and skewness of the broad Hβ profiles, suggesting a common physical explanation for these profiles. We carried out follow-up spectroscopic observations of 68 objects to search for changes in the peak velocities of the Hβ lines. We measured statistically significant changes in 14 objects, with implied accelerations between –120 and +120 km s–1 yr–1. Interpreting the offset broad emission lines as signatures of supermassive binaries is subject to many caveats. Many more follow-up observations over a long temporal baseline are needed to characterize the variability pattern of the broad lines and test that it is consistent with orbital motion. The possibility that some of the objects in this sample are rapidly recoiling BHs remains open.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A systematic search for close supermassive black hole binaries in the Catalina Real-time Transient Survey

TL;DR: In this article, the optical variability of the Catalina Real-Time Transient Survey (CRTS) data was used to identify binary supermassive black hole (SMBH) binaries.
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Accretion into the central cavity of a circumbinary disc

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used 2D hydrodynamical simulations to study the accretion streams and their periodic behavior of a near-equal mass binary black hole in a circumbinary accretion disk, and found that while the binary is efficient in maintaining a low-density cavity, the time-averaged mass accretion rate into the cavity, through narrow coherent accretion stream, is suppressed by at most a factor of $\sim 5$ compared to a disk with a single BH with the same mass.
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The Lick AGN Monitoring Project 2011: Spectroscopic Campaign and Emission-line Light Curves

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References
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A Fundamental Relation Between Supermassive Black Holes and Their Host Galaxies

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The Demography of massive dark objects in galaxy centers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors constructed dynamical models for a sample of 36 nearby galaxies with Hubble Space Telescope (HST) photometry and ground-based kinematics, assuming that each galaxy is axisymmetric, with a two-integral distribution function, arbitrary inclination angle, a position-independent stellar mass-to-light ratio, and a central massive dark object of arbitrary mass M•.
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