A systematic search for close supermassive black hole binaries in the Catalina Real-Time Transient Survey
Matthew J. Graham, S. G. Djorgovski, Daniel Stern, Andrew J., Drake, Ashish A. Mahabal, Ciro Donalek, Eilat Glikman, Steve, Larsen, Eric Christensen

TL;DR
This paper searches for close supermassive black hole binaries in a large quasar dataset, identifying 111 candidates with periodic variability consistent with theoretical models, providing insights into SMBH evolution and gravitational wave sources.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis method applied to CRTS data to identify SMBH binary candidates, aligning observations with theoretical predictions and ruling out spurious detections.
Findings
111 candidate SMBH binaries identified
Candidates match theoretical binary population models
No candidates are expected to merge within a century
Abstract
Hierarchical assembly models predict a population of supermassive black hole (SMBH) binaries. These are not resolvable by direct imaging but may be detectable via periodic variability (or nanohertz frequency gravitational waves). Following our detection of a 5.2 year periodic signal in the quasar PG 1302-102 (Graham et al. 2015), we present a novel analysis of the optical variability of 243,500 known spectroscopically confirmed quasars using data from the Catalina Real-time Transient Survey (CRTS) to look for close (< 0.1 pc) SMBH systems. Looking for a strong Keplerian periodic signal with at least 1.5 cycles over a baseline of nine years, we find a sample of 111 candidate objects. This is in conservative agreement with theoretical predictions from models of binary SMBH populations. Simulated data sets, assuming stochastic variability, also produce no equivalent candidates implying a…
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