The closest black holes
Rob Fender (Southampton), Tom Maccarone (Southampton), Ian Heywood, (Oxford)

TL;DR
This paper models the potential X-ray and radio signatures of a large, hidden population of isolated stellar-mass black holes in our galaxy, predicting their detectability with future radio surveys like SKA.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed simulation of the observable signatures of a large population of isolated black holes accreting from the interstellar medium.
Findings
Predicted radio flux densities are below current detection limits but detectable with SKA.
Constraints on accretion efficiency and velocities suggest low efficiency or high velocities.
Proper motions of these black holes could be identified in future radio surveys.
Abstract
Starting from the assumption that there is a large population (> 10^8) of isolated, stellar-mass black holes (IBH) distributed throughout our galaxy, we consider the detectable signatures of accretion from the interstellar medium (ISM) that may be associated with such a population. We simulate the nearby (radius 250 pc) part of this population, corresponding to the closest ~35 000 black holes, using current best estimates of the mass distribution of stellar mass black holes combined with two models for the velocity distribution of stellar-mass IBH which bracket likely possibilities. We distribute this population of objects appropriately within the different phases of the ISM and calculate the Bondi-Hoyle accretion rate, modified by a further dimensionless efficiency parameter \lambda. Assuming a simple prescription for radiatively inefficient accretion at low Eddington ratios, we…
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