The nature of massive black hole binary candidates: I. Spectral properties and evolution
Roberto Decarli, Massimo Dotti, Michele Fumagalli, Paraskevi, Tsalmantza, Carmen Montuori, Elisabeta Lusso, David W. Hogg, Jason X., Prochaska

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the spectral properties and evolution of candidate massive black hole binaries, revealing diverse line profile phenomenologies and implications for binary search strategies.
Contribution
It provides a detailed classification of broad line profile behaviors in candidate binaries, enhancing understanding of their spectral evolution and observational signatures.
Findings
Diverse broad and narrow line phenomenology observed
Four main classes of broad line profiles identified
Implications for black hole binary detection strategies discussed
Abstract
Theoretically, bound binaries of massive black holes are expected as the natural outcome of mergers of massive galaxies. From the observational side, however, massive black hole binaries remain elusive. Velocity shifts between narrow and broad emission lines in quasar spectra are considered a promising observational tool to search for spatially unresolved, dynamically bound binaries. In this series of papers we investigate the nature of such candidates through analyses of their spectra, images and multi-wavelength spectral energy distributions. Here we investigate the properties of the optical spectra, including the evolution of the broad line profiles, of all the sources identified in our previous study. We find a diverse phenomenology of broad and narrow line luminosities, widths, shapes, ionization conditions and time variability, which we can broadly ascribe to 4 classes based on…
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