Gravitational waves from intermediate-mass black holes in young clusters
M. Mapelli, C. Huwyler, L. Mayer, Ph. Jetzer, A. Vecchio

TL;DR
This paper assesses the detectability of gravitational waves from intermediate-mass black hole mergers in young clusters, highlighting the potential of future observatories like ET for observing such events.
Contribution
It provides the first estimates of gravitational wave event rates from IMBH mergers in young clusters across different current and future detectors.
Findings
Advanced LIGO may detect a few IMBH merger events annually.
ET could observe tens to hundreds of IMBH mergers per year.
LISA is unlikely to detect IMBH mergers due to mass range constraints.
Abstract
Massive young clusters (YCs) are expected to host intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) born via runaway collapse. These IMBHs are likely in binaries and can undergo mergers with other compact objects, such as stellar mass black holes (BHs) and neutron stars (NSs). We derive the frequency of such mergers starting from information available in the Local Universe. Mergers of IMBH-NS and IMBH-BH binaries are sources of gravitational waves (GWs), which might allow us to reveal the presence of IMBHs. We thus examine their detectability by current and future GW observatories, both ground- and space-based. In particular, as representative of different classes of instruments we consider Initial and Advanced LIGO, the Einstein gravitational-wave Telescope (ET) and the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA). We find that IMBH mergers are unlikely to be detected with instruments operating at…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
