Missing black holes in brightest cluster galaxies as evidence for the occurrence of superkicks in nature
Davide Gerosa, Alberto Sesana

TL;DR
This paper explores how superkicks from asymmetric gravitational wave emission during SMBH mergers can eject black holes from brightest cluster galaxies, affecting their population and providing observable tests with future telescopes.
Contribution
It predicts the impact of superkicks on SMBH retention in BCGs and suggests future observations can test these effects.
Findings
Superkicks can eject SMBHs from BCGs with high probability.
Occupation fraction of SMBHs in BCGs may be reduced to 90-99%.
Future telescopes can observe SMBHs in BCGs up to z=0.2 to test these predictions.
Abstract
We investigate the consequences of superkicks on the population of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) in the Universe residing in brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs). There is strong observational evidence that BCGs grew prominently at late times (up to a factor 2-4 in mass from z=1), mainly through mergers with satellite galaxies from the cluster, and they are known to host the most massive SMBHs ever observed. Those SMBHs are also expected to grow hierarchically, experiencing a series of mergers with other SMBHs brought in by merging satellites. Because of the net linear momentum taken away from the asymmetric gravitational wave emission, the remnant SMBH experiences a kick in the opposite direction. Kicks may be as large as ~5000 Km/s ("superkicks"), pushing the SMBHs out in the cluster outskirts for a time comparable to galaxy-evolution timescales. We predict, under a number of…
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