Electromagnetic counterparts of supermassive black hole binaries resolved by pulsar timing arrays
Takamitsu Tanaka (1,2), Kristen Menou (1), Zolt\'an Haiman (1) ((1), Columbia University, (2) Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics)

TL;DR
This paper assesses the feasibility of identifying electromagnetic counterparts to supermassive black hole binaries detected by pulsar timing arrays, proposing observational signatures that distinguish these sources from typical active galactic nuclei.
Contribution
It introduces a model predicting electromagnetic signatures of PTA-detected SMBH binaries, aiding their identification among luminous AGN.
Findings
Host galaxies are likely massive and rare, enabling identification up to z=0.2.
PTA sources may show low X-ray and UV emission, with red optical colors at z~1.
Candidate identification remains feasible with upcoming wide-field surveys.
Abstract
Pulsar timing arrays (PTAs) are expected to detect gravitational waves (GWs) from individual low-redshift (z<1.5) compact supermassive (M>10^9 Msun) black hole (SMBH) binaries with orbital periods of approx. 0.1 - 10 yrs. Identifying the electromagnetic (EM) counterparts of these sources would provide confirmation of putative direct detections of GWs, present a rare opportunity to study the environments of compact SMBH binaries, and could enable the use of these sources as standard sirens for cosmology. Here we consider the feasibility of such an EM identification. We show that because the host galaxies of resolved PTA sources are expected to be exceptionally massive and rare, it should be possible to find unique hosts of resolved sources out to redshift z=0.2. At higher redshifts, the PTA error boxes are larger, and may contain as many as 100 massive-galaxy interlopers. The number of…
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