The Dynamical Evolution of Stellar Black Holes in Globular Clusters
Meagan Morscher, Bharath Pattabiraman, Carl Rodriguez, Frederic A., Rasio, and Stefan Umbreit

TL;DR
This study uses Monte Carlo simulations to show that many stellar-mass black holes can remain in globular clusters for billions of years, challenging previous beliefs that they are ejected early.
Contribution
It demonstrates through extensive models that black holes are retained longer in globular clusters due to dynamical processes, revising earlier ejection theories.
Findings
Many black holes (up to ~1000) are retained in clusters to present day.
Black hole segregation does not lead to a long-term core separation.
Black holes may significantly influence cluster evolution and structure.
Abstract
Our current understanding of the stellar initial mass function and massive star evolution suggests that young globular clusters may have formed hundreds to thousands of stellar-mass black holes, the remnants of stars with initial masses from . Birth kicks from supernova explosions may eject some black holes from their birth clusters, but most should be retained. Using a Monte Carlo method we investigate the long-term dynamical evolution of globular clusters containing large numbers of stellar black holes. We describe numerical results for 42 models, covering a range of realistic initial conditions, including up to stars. In almost all models we find that significant numbers of black holes (up to ) are retained all the way to the present. This is in contrast to previous theoretical expectations that most black holes should be ejected…
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