论文标题
使用银河系的球状簇评估直接捕获和第三体软相互作用的二元黑洞的合并速率
Evaluating the Merger Rate of Binary Black Holes from Direct Captures and Third-Body Soft Interactions Using the Milky Way Globular Clusters
论文作者
论文摘要
引力波中的众多二元黑洞合并检测使我们对可能成为这些合并的摇篮的环境的兴趣重新兴趣。在这项工作中,我们研究了球状簇中二元黑洞的合并速率,这是最密集的恒星环境之一,也是创建黑洞二进制的自然位置。为了对这些系统进行所有变化进行建模,我们依赖于已知的银河系簇的观察性能。我们考虑在黑洞之间进行直接捕获事件,以及黑洞二进制的软相互作用与恒星的软相互作用是加速这些二进制物的第三体。我们发现,直接捕获合并的二进制黑洞以$ 0.3-5 \ times 10^{ - 11} $ yr $^{ - 1} $每个群集合并。第三个身体软互动是一个更为突出的通道,平均速率为$ 2-4 \ times 10^{ - 10} $ yr $^{ - 1} $每个群集。球状簇中的那些速率可能会导致每年约100个合并的累积合并率,直至红移为1,即在不久的将来的二进制黑洞合并事件中可检测到的大部分。从质量,剖面特性,恒星的速度分散及其宇宙学分布方面,对簇特性的进一步观察将使我们能够更好地限制这些环境对可检测到的聚结的效果的贡献。
The multitude of binary black hole coalescence detections in gravitational waves has renewed our interest on environments that can be the cradle of these mergers. In this work we study merger rates of binary black holes in globular clusters that are among the most dense stellar environments and a natural place for the creation of black hole binaries. To model these systems with all their variations we rely on the observational properties of the known Milky Way globular clusters. We consider direct capture events between black holes, as well as soft interactions of black hole binaries with stars as third bodies that accelerate the evolution of these binaries. We find that binary black holes from direct captures merge at an averaged rate of $0.3-5 \times 10^{-11}$ yr$^{-1}$ per cluster. Third body soft interactions are a much more prominent channel giving an averaged rate of $2-4 \times 10^{-10}$ yr$^{-1}$ per cluster. Those rates in globular clusters can lead to a cumulative merger rate of about 100 mergers per year up to redshift of 1, i.e. a significant fraction of the detectable in the near future binary black hole coalescence events. Further observations of cluster properties both in terms of their masses, profile properties, velocity dispersion of stars and their cosmological distribution, will allow us to better constrain the contribution of these environments to the detectable coalescence events rate.