Gravitational waves and stalled satellites from massive galaxy mergers at z <= 1
Sean T. McWilliams, Jeremiah P. Ostriker, Frans Pretorius

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution of massive galaxies and their black holes due to mergers since z <= 1, predicts a strong gravitational wave background detectable soon, and connects satellite black holes to ULX observations.
Contribution
It introduces a merger-driven evolution model for massive galaxies and black holes, predicting a detectable gravitational wave signal and explaining ULX sources.
Findings
Predicted gravitational wave signal exceeds previous estimates, potentially detectable soon.
The model reproduces observed galaxy mass function evolution without star formation.
Satellite black holes may account for observed ULX sources in brightest cluster galaxies.
Abstract
We present a model for merger-driven evolution of the mass function for massive galaxies and their central supermassive black holes at late times. We discuss the current observational evidence in favor of merger-driven massive galaxy evolution during this epoch, and demonstrate that the observed evolution of the mass function can be reproduced by evolving an initial mass function under the assumption of negligible star formation. We calculate the stochastic gravitational wave signal from the resulting black-hole binary mergers in the low redshift universe (z <= 1) implied by this model, and find that this population has a signal-to-noise ratio as much as ~5x larger than previous estimates for pulsar timing arrays, with an expectation value for the characteristic strain h_c (f=1 yr^{-1}) = 4.1 x 10^{-15} that may already be in tension with observational constraints, and a {2-sigma,…
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