Recoiling Supermassive Black Holes: a search in the Nearby Universe
D. Lena, A. Robinson, A. Marconi, D. J. Axon, A. Capetti, D. Merritt, and D. Batcheldor

TL;DR
This study investigates small displacements between supermassive black holes and galaxy centers in nearby ellipticals, providing evidence for gravitational recoil effects and potential links to radio jet asymmetries.
Contribution
First observational evidence of small SMBH displacements in nearby ellipticals, suggesting gravitational recoil and jet asymmetry as possible causes.
Findings
Detected SMBH displacements in 6 out of 14 galaxies.
Displacements are approximately aligned with radio jet axes.
Displacements could result from gravitational recoil or jet asymmetries.
Abstract
The coalescence of a binary black hole can be accompanied by a large gravitational recoil due to anisotropic emission of gravitational waves. A recoiling supermassive black hole (SBH) can subsequently undergo long-lived oscillations in the potential well of its host galaxy, suggesting that offset SBHs may be common in the cores of massive ellipticals. We have analyzed HST archival images of 14 nearby core ellipticals, finding evidence for small ( pc) displacements between the AGN (locating the SBH) and the center of the galaxy (the mean photocenter) in 10 of them. Excluding objects that may be affected by large-scale isophotal asymmetries, we consider six galaxies to have detected displacements, including M87, where a displacement was previously reported by Batcheldor et al. 2010. In individual objects, these displacements can be attributed to residual gravitational recoil…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
