A Large Systematic Search for Recoiling and Close Supermassive Binary Black Holes
Michael Eracleous, Todd A. Boroson, Jules P. Halpern, and Jia Liu

TL;DR
This study systematically searched for close supermassive black hole binaries in quasars using spectroscopic analysis, identifying candidates with significant broad line shifts and variability, providing insights into black hole co-evolution and recoil phenomena.
Contribution
Introduces an automated spectroscopic method to identify candidate supermassive black hole binaries and recoiling black holes among quasars, expanding the observational census.
Findings
88 candidates identified with extreme broad line shifts
Significant velocity changes observed in 14 objects over 1-10 years
Correlation between line offset and skewness suggests a common physical origin
Abstract
[ABRIDGED] We have carried out a systematic search for close supermassive black hole binaries among z < 0.7 SDSS quasars Such binaries are predicted by models of supermassive black hole and host galaxy co-evolution, therefore their census and population properties constitute an important test of these models. We used an automatic technique based on spectroscopic principal component analysis to search for broad H-beta lines that are displaced from the rest-frame of the quasar by more than 1,000 km/s This method can also yield candidates for rapidly recoiling black holes. Our search yielded 88 candidates, several of which were previously identified and discussed in the literature. The widths of the broad H-beta lines are typical among quasars but the shifts are extreme. We found a correlation between the peak offset and skewness of the broad H-beta profiles, which suggests that the…
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