Discovery of a Candidate Binary Supermassive Black Hole in a Periodic Quasar from Circumbinary Accretion Variability
Wei-Ting Liao, Yu-Ching Chen, Xin Liu, A. Miguel Holgado, Hengxiao, Guo, Robert Gruendl, Eric Morganson, Yue Shen, Tamara Davis, Richard Kessler,, Paul Martini, Richard G. McMahon, Sahar Allam, James Annis, Santiago Avila,, Manda Banerji, Keith Bechtol, Emmanuel Bertin

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a periodic quasar likely caused by a binary supermassive black hole, providing evidence for circumbinary accretion variability and implications for gravitational wave detection.
Contribution
It presents the first candidate binary supermassive black hole identified through circumbinary accretion variability in a quasar's light curve.
Findings
Detected a 1607-day periodicity in a quasar's optical light curve.
Bursty hydrodynamic model fits the data better than a sinusoidal Doppler boost model.
Supports the presence of a binary supermassive black hole emitting gravitational waves.
Abstract
Binary supermassive black holes (BSBHs) are expected to be a generic byproduct from hierarchical galaxy formation. The final coalescence of BSBHs is thought to be the loudest gravitational wave (GW) siren, yet no confirmed BSBH is known in the GW-dominated regime. While periodic quasars have been proposed as BSBH candidates, the physical origin of the periodicity has been largely uncertain. Here we report discovery of a periodicity (P=16077 days) at 99.95% significance (with a global p-value of ~ accounting for the look elsewhere effect) in the optical light curves of a redshift 1.53 quasar, SDSS J025214.67-002813.7. Combining archival Sloan Digital Sky Survey data with new, sensitive imaging from the Dark Energy Survey, the total ~20-yr time baseline spans ~4.6 cycles of the observed 4.4-yr (restframe 1.7-yr) periodicity. The light curves are best fit by a bursty model…
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