A VLBA search for binary black holes in active galactic nuclei with double-peaked optical emission line spectra
S. J. Tingay, R. B. Wayth

TL;DR
This study used VLBA radio observations to search for binary black holes in AGN with double-peaked emission lines, finding no double radio cores, thus providing limited support for the binary black hole hypothesis in these objects.
Contribution
First VLBA survey targeting double-peaked emission line AGN to directly search for binary black holes via dual radio cores.
Findings
Detected compact radio emission in 2 out of 11 AGN
No double radio cores observed, challenging the binary black hole interpretation
Detection rate aligns with expectations from previous surveys
Abstract
We have examined a subset of 11 active galactic nuclei (AGN) drawn from a sample of 87 objects that possess double-peaked optical emission line spectra, as put forward by Wang et al. (2009a) and are detectable in the FIRST survey at radio wavelengths. The double-peaked nature of the optical emission line spectra has been suggested as evidence for the existence of binary black holes in these AGN, although this interpretation is controversial. We make a simple suggestion, that direct evidence of binary black holes in these objects could be searched for in the form of dual sources of compact radio emission associated with the AGN. To explore this idea, we have used the Very Long Baseline Array to observe these 11 objects from the Wang et al. (2009a) sample. Of the 11 objects, we detect compact radio emission from two, SDSS J151709+335324 and SDSS J160024+264035. Both objects show single…
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