Thursday, June 20, 2013

1306.4330 (Yue Shen et al.)

Constraining sub-Parsec Binary Supermassive Black Holes in Quasars with Multi-Epoch Spectroscopy. I. The General Quasar Population    [PDF]

Yue Shen, Xin Liu, Abraham Loeb, Scott Tremaine
We perform a systematic search for sub-parsec binary supermassive black holes (BHs) in normal broad line quasars at z<0.8, using multi-epoch SDSS spectroscopy of the broad Hbeta line. Our working model is that: only one of the two BHs in the binary is active, and dynamically dominates its own broad line region (BLR); the inactive companion BH is orbiting at a distance of a few R_BLR, where R_BLR~0.01-0.1 pc is the BLR size. We search for the expected line-of-sight acceleration of the broad line velocity from binary orbital motion by cross-correlating SDSS spectra from two epochs separated by up to several years in the quasar restframe. Out of ~700 pairs of spectra for which we have good measurements of the velocity shift between two epochs (1-sigma error~40 km/s), we detect 28 systems with significant velocity shifts in broad Hbeta, among which seven are the best candidates for the hypothesized binaries. We use the distribution of the observed accelerations (mostly non-detections) to place constraints on the abundance of such binary systems among the general quasar population. Excess variance in the velocity shift is inferred for observations separated by longer than 0.4 yr (quasar restframe). Attributing all the excess to binary motion would imply that most of the quasars in this sample must be in binaries; that the inactive BH must be on average more massive than the active one; and that the binary separation is at most a few times the size of the BLR. However, if this excess variance is partly or largely due to long-term broad line variability, the requirement of a large population of close binaries is much weakened or even disfavored for massive companions. [Abridged]
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1306.4330

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