O’Neill, S. and Kiehlmann, S. and Readhead, A. C. S. and Aller, M. F. and Blandford, R. D. and Liodakis, I. and Lister, M. L. and Mróz, P. and O’Dea, C. P. and Pearson, T. J. and Ravi, V. and Vallisneri, M. and Cleary, K. A. and Graham, M. J. and Grainge, K. J. B. and Hodges, M. W. and Hovatta, T. and Lähteenmäki, A. and Lamb, J. W. and Lazio, T. J. W. and Max-Moerbeck, W. and Pavlidou, V. and Prince, T. A. and Reeves, R. A. and Tornikoski, M. and Vergara de la Parra, P. and Zensus, J. A. (2022) The Unanticipated Phenomenology of the Blazar PKS 2131–021: A Unique Supermassive Black Hole Binary Candidate. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 926 (2). L35. ISSN 2041-8205
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Abstract
Most large galaxies host supermassive black holes in their nuclei and are subject to mergers, which can produce a supermassive black hole binary (SMBHB), and hence periodic signatures due to orbital motion. We report unique periodic radio flux density variations in the blazar PKS 2131−021, which strongly suggest an SMBHB with an orbital separation of ∼0.001–0.01 pc. Our 45.1 yr radio light curve shows two epochs of strong sinusoidal variation with the same period and phase to within ≲2% and ∼10%, respectively, straddling a 20 yr period when this variation was absent. Our simulated light curves accurately reproduce the "red noise" of this object, and Lomb–Scargle, weighted wavelet Z-transform and least-squares sine-wave analyses demonstrate conclusively, at the 4.6σ significance level, that the periodicity in this object is not due to random fluctuations in flux density. The observed period translates to 2.082 ± 0.003 yr in the rest frame at the z = 1.285 redshift of PKS 2131−021. The periodic variation in PKS 2131−021 is remarkably sinusoidal. We present a model in which orbital motion, combined with the strong Doppler boosting of the approaching relativistic jet, produces a sine-wave modulation in the flux density that easily fits the observations. Given the rapidly developing field of gravitational-wave experiments with pulsar timing arrays, closer counterparts to PKS 2131−021 and searches using the techniques we have developed are strongly motivated. These results constitute a compelling demonstration that the phenomenology, not the theory, must provide the lead in this field.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | Archive Science > Physics and Astronomy |
Depositing User: | Managing Editor |
Date Deposited: | 04 May 2023 07:36 |
Last Modified: | 20 Jul 2024 09:54 |
URI: | http://editor.pacificarchive.com/id/eprint/743 |