A candidate supermassive binary black hole system in the brightest cluster galaxy of RBS 797
M. Gitti, M. Giroletti, G. Giovannini, L. Feretti, E. Liuzzo

TL;DR
This paper presents evidence for a candidate supermassive binary black hole system in the brightest galaxy of RBS 797, based on high-resolution radio observations revealing two compact components separated by about 77 parsecs.
Contribution
The study provides the first high-resolution VLBI detection of two compact radio components in RBS 797's galaxy, suggesting a possible supermassive binary black hole system at medium-high redshift.
Findings
Detection of two compact radio components separated by ~77 pc.
Archival VLA data shows two pairs of misaligned jets from the core.
The system could be a binary black hole or a core-jet knot scenario.
Abstract
The radio source at the center of the cool core galaxy cluster RBS 797 (z=0.35) is known to exhibit a misalignment of its radio jets and lobes observed at different VLA-scale, with the innermost kpc-scale jets being almost orthogonal to the radio emission which extends for tens of kpc filling the X-ray cavities. Gitti et al. suggested that this peculiar radio morphology may indicate a recurrent activity of the central radio source, where the jet orientation is changing between the different outbursts due to the effects of supermassive binary black holes (SMBBHs). We aim at unveiling the nuclear radio properties of the brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) in RBS 797 and at investigating the presence of a SMBBH system in its center. We have performed new high-resolution observations at 5 GHz with the European VLBI Network (EVN), reaching an angular resolution of 9x5 mas^2 and a sensitivity of…
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