论文标题
黑洞家谱:识别引力波的分层合并
Black hole genealogy: Identifying hierarchical mergers with gravitational waves
论文作者
论文摘要
在密集的恒星环境中,二进制黑洞合并的合并产品可能会经历其他合并。这些分层合并的质量被预测高于恒星制成的第一代黑洞。层次合并的组成部分预计将具有明显的特征旋转$χ\ sim 0.7 $。但是,由于第一代黑洞的种群特性不确定,因此很难知道任何给定的合并是第一代还是分层。我们使用重力波的观察结果来重建包含分层合并事件的人群的二元黑洞质量和自旋光谱。我们采用了一种现象学模型,该模型捕获了从密集恒星环境的模拟中合并二进制黑洞的特性。受到低自旋黑洞孤立形成的最新作品的启发,我们包括零旋转亚群。我们分析了Ligo和处女座的前两个观察跑的二进制黑洞,发现该目录与没有分层合并一致。我们发现,该目录中最庞大的系统GW170729大多可能是第一代合并,假设$ 4 \%$ $ $ $ 5 \ times 10^5 m _ {\ odot} $ globular clumar clustruster质量。使用我们的模型,我们发现合并二进制中的第一代黑洞的$ 99 \%$的质量低于44 $ m _ {\ odot} $,而接近零的旋转的二进制文件的含量为$ 0.051^{+0.156} {+0.156} __ { - 0.048} $ { - 0.048} $($ 90 $ 90- $ 90-90 $ 90- $ 90-90 $ \%)。即将进行的观察将确定分层合并是否是重力波的常见来源。
In dense stellar environments, the merger products of binary black hole mergers may undergo additional mergers. These hierarchical mergers are predicted to have higher masses than the first generation of black holes made from stars. The components of hierarchical mergers are expected to have significant characteristic spins $χ\sim 0.7$. However, since the population properties of first-generation black holes are uncertain, it is difficult to know if any given merger is first-generation or hierarchical. We use observations of gravitational waves to reconstruct the binary black hole mass and spin spectrum of a population containing hierarchical merger events. We employ a phenomenological model that captures the properties of merging binary black holes from simulations of dense stellar environments. Inspired by recent work on the isolated formation of low-spin black holes, we include a zero-spin subpopulation. We analyze binary black holes from LIGO and Virgo's first two observing runs, and find that this catalog is consistent with having no hierarchical mergers. We find that the most massive system in this catalog, GW170729, is mostly likely a first-generation merger, having a $4\%$ probability of being a hierarchical merger assuming a $5 \times 10^5 M_{\odot}$ globular cluster mass. Using our model, we find that $99\%$ of first-generation black holes in coalescing binaries have masses below 44 $M_{\odot}$, and the fraction of binaries with near-zero spin is $0.051^{+0.156}_{-0.048}$ ($90\%$ credible interval). Upcoming observations will determine if hierarchical mergers are a common source of gravitational waves.