Double-peaked Narrow-Line Signatures of Dual Supermassive Black Holes in Galaxy Merger Simulations
Laura Blecha, Abraham Loeb, and Ramesh Narayan

TL;DR
This study models the origin of double-peaked narrow-line AGN in galaxy mergers, revealing their connection to supermassive black hole pairs and emphasizing the importance of high-resolution follow-up for confirmation.
Contribution
Introduces a novel physical prescription in hydrodynamic simulations to model narrow-line regions in galaxy mergers, linking double-peaked AGN to SMBH pairs and gas kinematics.
Findings
Double-peaked AGN are common but short-lived in late-stage mergers.
Most double peaks originate from gas kinematics near SMBHs.
Velocity splittings > 500 km/s often indicate SMBH pairs.
Abstract
We present a first attempt to model the narrow-line (NL) region of active galactic nuclei (AGN) in hydrodynamic simulations of galaxy mergers, using a novel physical prescription. This model is used to determine the origin of double-peaked NL (dNL) AGN in merging galaxies and their connection to supermassive black hole (SMBH) pairs, motivated by recent observations of such objects. We find that dNL AGN induced by the relative motion of SMBH pairs are a generic but short-lived feature of gaseous major mergers. dNL AGN should often be observed in late-stage mergers, during the kpc-scale phase of SMBH inspiral or soon after the SMBH merger. However, even within the kpc-scale phase, only a minority of dNL AGN are directly induced by SMBH motion; their lifetimes are typically a few Myr. Most double peaks arise from gas kinematics near the SMBH, although prior to the SMBH merger up to 80% of…
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