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. Belecki
  • , E. C. Bellm
  • , R. Burruss
  • , S. B. Cenko
  • , V. Cunningham
  • , G. Helou
  • , S. R. Kulkarni
  • F. J. Masci, T. Prince, D. Reiley, H. Rodriguez, B. Rusholme, R. M. Smith, M. T. Soumagnac

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

330 Scopus citations

Abstract

We report the first plausible optical electromagnetic counterpart to a (candidate) binary black hole merger. Detected by the Zwicky Transient Facility, the electromagnetic flare is consistent with expectations for a kicked binary black hole merger in the accretion disk of an active galactic nucleus [B. McKernan, K. E. S. Ford, I. Bartos et al., Astrophys. J. Lett. 884, L50 (2019)AJLEEY2041-821310.3847/2041-8213/ab4886] and is unlikely [<O(0.01%))] due to intrinsic variability of this source. The lack of color evolution implies that it is not a supernova 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 <O(0.1%). If the flare is associated with S190521g, we find plausible values of total mass M_{BBH}∼100  M_{⊙}, kick velocity v_{k}∼200  km s^{-1} at θ∼60° in a disk with aspect ratio H/a∼0.01 (i.e., disk height H at radius a) and gas density ρ∼10^{-10}  g cm^{-3}. The merger could have occurred at a disk migration trap (a∼700r_{g}; r_{g}≡GM_{SMBH}/c^{2}, where M_{SMBH} is the mass of the active galactic nucleus supermassive black hole). The combination of parameters implies a significant spin for at least one of the black holes in S190521g. The timing of our spectroscopy prevents useful constraints on broad-line asymmetry due to an off-center flare. We predict a repeat flare in this source due to a reencountering with the disk in ∼1.6  yr(M_{SMBH}/10^{8}  M_{⊙})(a/10^{3}r_{g})^{3/2}.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number251102
JournalPhysical review letters
Volume124
Issue number25
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 26 2020

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Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Physical Society.

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article

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