English

Active galactic nuclei do not exhibit strictly sinusoidal brightness variations

Astrophysics of Galaxies 2026-01-28 v2 High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena

Abstract

Periodic variability in active galactic nuclei (AGN) light curves has been proposed as a signature of close supermassive black hole (SMBH) binaries. Recently, 181 candidate SMBH binaries were identified in Gaia DR3 based on apparently stable sinusoidal variability in their \sim1000-day light curves. By supplementing Gaia photometry with longer-baseline light curves from the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) and the Catalina Real Time Transient Survey (CRTS), we test whether the reported periodic signals persist beyond the Gaia DR3 time window. We find that in all 116 cases with available ZTF data, the Gaia-inferred periodic model fails to predict subsequent variability, which appears stochastic rather than periodic. The periodic candidates thus overwhelmingly appear to be false positives; red noise contamination appears to be the primary source of false detections. We conclude that truly periodic and sinusoidal AGN variability is exceedingly rare, with at most a few in 10610^6 AGN exhibiting it on 100 to 1000 day timescales. Models predict that the Gaia AGN light curve sample should contain dozens of true SMBH binaries with periods within the observational baseline, so the lack of strictly periodic light curves in the sample suggests that most short-period binary AGN do not have light curves dominated by simple sinusoidal periodicity.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2509.10601,
  title  = {Active galactic nuclei do not exhibit strictly sinusoidal brightness variations},
  author = {Kareem El-Badry and David W. Hogg and Hans-Walter Rix},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2509.10601},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

18 pages, 3 figures, accepted to PASP

R2 v1 2026-07-01T05:34:11.197Z