Article (Scientific journals)
Evidence for a milliparsec-separation Supermassive Binary Black Hole with quasar microlensing
Millon, M.; Dalang, C.; Lemon, C. et al.
2022In Astronomy and Astrophysics, 668, p. 77
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Keywords :
astro-ph.GA; astro-ph.CO; astro-ph.HE; Space and Planetary Science; Astronomy and Astrophysics; Gravitational lensing; Quasars
Abstract :
[en] We report periodic oscillations in the 15-year long optical light curve of the gravitationally lensed quasar QJ0158-4325. The signal is enhanced during a high magnification microlensing event undergone by the fainter lensed image of the quasar, between 2003 and 2010. We measure a period of $P_{o}=172.6\pm0.9$ days. We explore four scenarios to explain the origin of the periodicity: 1- the high magnification microlensing event is due to a binary star in the lensing galaxy, 2- QJ0158-4325 contains a massive binary black hole system in its final dynamical stage before merging, 3- the quasar accretion disk contains a bright inhomogeneity in Keplerian motion around the black hole, and 4- the accretion disk is in precession. Among these four scenarios, only a supermassive binary black hole can account for both the short observed period and the amplitude of the signal, through the oscillation of the accretion disk towards and away from high-magnification regions of a microlensing caustic. The short measured period implies that the semi-long axis of the orbit is $\sim10^{-3}$pc, and the coalescence timescale is $t_{coal}\sim1000$ years, assuming that the decay of the orbit is solely powered by the emission of gravitational waves. The probability of observing a system so close to coalescence suggests either a much larger population of supermassive black hole binaries than predicted, or, more likely, that some other mechanism significantly increases the coalescence timescale. Three tests of the binary black hole hypothesis include: i) the recurrence of oscillations in photometric monitoring during any future microlensing events in either image, ii) spectroscopic detection of Doppler shifts (up to 0.01$c$), and iii) the detection of gravitational waves through Pulsar Timing Array experiments, such as the SKA, which will have the sensitivity to detect the $\sim$100 nano-hertz emission.
Disciplines :
Space science, astronomy & astrophysics
Author, co-author :
Millon, M. 
Dalang, C.
Lemon, C.
Sluse, Dominique  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département d'astrophysique, géophysique et océanographie (AGO)
Paic, E. 
J. H. H. Chan
Courbin, F. 
Language :
English
Title :
Evidence for a milliparsec-separation Supermassive Binary Black Hole with quasar microlensing
Publication date :
December 2022
Journal title :
Astronomy and Astrophysics
ISSN :
0004-6361
eISSN :
1432-0746
Publisher :
EDP Sciences
Volume :
668
Pages :
A77
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
European Projects :
H2020 - 787886 - COSMICLENS - Cosmology with Strong Gravitational Lensing
Funders :
ERC - European Research Council [BE]
SNSF - Swiss National Science Foundation [CH]
Union Européenne [BE]
Commentary :
18 pages, 15 figures, published in A&A
Available on ORBi :
since 11 December 2022

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