Candidate Electromagnetic Counterpart to the Binary Black Hole Merger Gravitational Wave Event S190521g
M. J. Graham, K. E. S. Ford, B. McKernan, N. P. Ross, D. Stern, K., Burdge, M. Coughlin, S. G. Djorgovski, A. J. Drake, D. Duev, M. Kasliwal, A., A. Mahabal, S. van Velzen, J. Belicki, E. C. Bellm, R. Burruss, S. B. Cenko,, V. Cunningham, G. Helou, S. R. Kulkarni, F. J. Masci

TL;DR
This paper reports the first plausible optical electromagnetic counterpart to a candidate binary black hole merger, detected by ZTF, consistent with a kicked BBH merger in an AGN disk, providing insights into the merger environment and properties.
Contribution
It presents the first candidate optical EM counterpart to a BBH merger, suggesting a specific environment and physical parameters, and constrains possible scenarios for such events.
Findings
Detection of an optical flare consistent with a kicked BBH merger.
The flare is unlikely due to intrinsic variability, supernovae, microlensing, or tidal disruption.
Estimated parameters include a total mass of ~100 solar masses and a kick velocity of ~200 km/s.
Abstract
We report the first plausible optical electromagnetic (EM) counterpart to a (candidate) binary black hole (BBH) merger. Detected by the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF), the EM flare is consistent with expectations for a kicked BBH merger in the accretion disk of an active galactic nucleus (AGN), and is unlikely ()) due to intrinsic variability of this source. The lack of color evolution implies that it is not a supernovae and instead is strongly suggestive of a constant temperature shock. Other false-positive events, such as microlensing or a tidal disruption event, are ruled out or constrained to be ). If the flare is associated with S190521g, we find plausible values of: total mass , kick velocity at in a disk with aspect ratio (i.e., disk height …
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