GMP-selected dual and lensed AGNs: selection function and classification based on near-IR colors and resolved spectra from VLT/ERIS, KECK/OSIRIS, and LBT/LUCI
F. Mannucci, M. Scialpi, A. Ciurlo, S. Yeh, C. Marconcini, G. Tozzi,, G. Cresci, A. Marconi, A. Amiri, F. Belfiore, S. Carniani, C. Cicone, E., Nardini, E. Pancino, K. Rubinur, P. Severgnini, L. Ulivi, G. Venturi, C., Vignali, M. Volonteri, E. Pinna, F. Rossi, A. Puglisi

TL;DR
This study evaluates the GMP technique for identifying dual and lensed AGNs, demonstrating its efficiency and reliability through spectroscopic and color-based classifications, and highlighting its potential to discover numerous close-separation dual AGNs.
Contribution
The paper assesses the selection function and classification methods of the GMP technique, combining spectroscopic and color analyses to improve identification of dual and lensed AGNs.
Findings
GMP selection is effective for separations >0.15'' with G<20.5.
Colors and integrated spectra can reliably classify systems.
GMP can identify many dual AGNs below 7 kpc separation.
Abstract
The Gaia-Multi-Peak (GMP) technique can be used to identify large numbers of dual or lensed AGN candidates at sub-arcsec separation, allowing us to study both multiple SMBHs in the same galaxy and rare, compact lensed systems. The observed samples can be used to test the predictions of the models of SMBH merging once 1) the selection function of the GMP technique is known, and 2) each system has been classified as dual AGN, lensed AGN, or AGN/star alignment. Here we show that the GMP selection is very efficient for separations above 0.15'' when the secondary (fainter) object has magnitude G<20.5. We present the spectroscopic classification of five GMP candidates using VLT/ERIS and Keck/OSIRIS, and compare them with the classifications obtained from: a) the near-IR colors of 7 systems obtained with LBT/LUCI, and b) the analysis of the total, spatially-unresolved spectra. We conclude that…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
