SDSS J1254+0846: A Binary Quasar Caught in the Act of Merging
Paul J. Green (1), Adam D. Myers (2), Wayne A. Barkhouse (3), John S., Mulchaey (4), Vardha N. Bennert (5), Thomas J. Cox (1,3), Thomas L. Aldcroft, (1), Joan M. Wrobel (6) ((1) Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, (2)

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and analysis of the first luminous binary quasar in an ongoing galaxy merger, providing insights into black hole growth and quasar activity during early merger stages.
Contribution
It presents the first spatially resolved binary quasar in a galaxy merger, with detailed imaging and modeling showing early-stage black hole growth and merger dynamics.
Findings
Binary quasars can be observed during early galaxy mergers.
Black hole accretion rates can be significantly enhanced during mergers.
Not all merging quasars are obscured or in ultraluminous phases.
Abstract
We present the first luminous, spatially resolved binary quasar that clearly inhabits an ongoing galaxy merger. SDSS J125455.09+084653.9 and SDSS J125454.87+084652.1 (SDSS J1254+0846 hereafter) are two luminous z=0.44 radio quiet quasars, with a radial velocity difference of just 215 km/s, separated on the sky by 21 kpc in a disturbed host galaxy merger showing obvious tidal tails. The pair was targeted as part of a complete sample of binary quasar candidates with small transverse separations drawn from SDSS DR6 photometry. We present follow-up optical imaging which shows broad, symmetrical tidal arm features spanning some 75 kpc at the quasars' redshift. Numerical modeling suggests that the system consists of two massive disk galaxies prograde to their mutual orbit, caught during the first passage of an active merger. This demonstrates rapid black hole growth during the early stages of…
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