Do LIGO/Virgo black hole mergers produce AGN flares? The case of GW190521 and prospects for reaching a confident association
Antonella Palmese, Maya Fishbach, Colin J. Burke, James T. Annis, Xin, Liu

TL;DR
This paper develops a Bayesian framework to assess the likelihood that black hole mergers detected by LIGO/Virgo are associated with AGN flares, highlighting the need for follow-up observations to confirm such associations and avoid bias in astrophysical inferences.
Contribution
It introduces a Bayesian formalism for estimating the confidence of AGN association with GW events and discusses the observational strategies needed for confirmation.
Findings
Follow-up of top BBH events can establish associations during O4.
Chance coincidence probability is high due to large localization volumes.
Formalism enables joint inference of cosmological parameters with potential biases.
Abstract
The recent report of an association of the gravitational-wave (GW) binary black hole (BBH) merger GW190521 with a flare in the Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) J124942.3+344929 has generated tremendous excitement. However, GW190521 has one of the largest localization volumes amongst all of the GW events detected so far. The 90\% localization volume likely contains unobscured AGN brighter than AB mag, and it results in a probability of chance coincidence for an AGN flare consistent with the GW event. We present a Bayesian formalism to estimate the confidence of an AGN association by analyzing a population of BBH events with dedicated follow-up observations. Depending on the fraction of BBH arising from AGNs, counterpart searches of GW events are needed to establish a confident association, and more than an order of…
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