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BHI Colloquium

Monday, April 6, 2026
11:00 AM

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BHI Colloquium

Maria Charisi

Description

Searching for Supermassive Black Hole Binaries

Supermassive black hole binaries (SMBHBs) should be common in galactic nuclei as a result of frequent galaxy mergers. Yet they remain undetectable, especially during the final stage of their evolution. At this stage, SMBHBs are expected to emit bright electromagnetic (EM) radiation and could be identified as quasars with periodic variability in time-domain surveys. I will describe systematic searches for quasar periodicity that have revealed promising candidates, as well as the challenges in confirming these candidates and prospects for discoveries with the Rubin Observatory. SMBHBs are also promising sources of low-frequency gravitational waves (GWs). In fact, Pulsar Timing Arrays recently found evidence for a GW background, likely produced by a population of unresolved SMBHBs. I will discuss this discovery and its implications for SMBHB evolution as well as the next expected milestone, which is the detection of individually resolved binaries. Finally, I will discuss recent work which combines electromagnetic and gravitational-wave data and aims to deliver the first multi-messenger detection of a SMBHB.

Zoom

 

When

Monday, April 6, 2026 11:00 AM

Where

Inperson
G10 and Zoom

BHI Publication

Expanding Sgr A* dynamical imaging capabilities with an African extension to the Event Horizon Telescope

April 1, 2023
Kantzas, D.; Markoff, S.; Lucchini, M.; Ceccobello, C.; Chatterjee, K.
Astrophysical jets are relativistic outflows that remain collimated for remarkably many orders of magnitude. Despite decades of research, the…
Read The BHI Publication