The first gravitational-wave source from the isolated evolution of two 40-100 Msun stars
Krzysztof Belczynski (1), Daniel E. Holz (2), Tomasz Bulik (1),, Richard O'Shaughnessy (3) ((1) University of Warsaw, (2) University of, Chicago, (3) Rochester Institute of Technology)

TL;DR
This paper presents high-precision simulations of isolated binary star evolution, explaining the formation of massive black hole mergers like GW150914 and predicting future detection rates and properties.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed modeling framework for binary black hole formation from low-metallicity massive stars, improving prediction accuracy over previous studies.
Findings
Massive black hole mergers form in low-metallicity environments.
Most binary black holes form without supernova explosions.
Predicted detection rate of about 1,000 mergers per year.
Abstract
The merger of two massive 30 Msun black holes has been detected in gravitational waves (1,GW150914). This discovery validates recent predictions (2-4) that massive binary black holes would constitute the first detection. However, previous calculations have not sampled the relevant binary black hole progenitors---massive, low-metallicity binary stars---with sufficient accuracy and input physics to enable robust predictions to better than several orders of magnitude (5-10). Here we report a suite of high-precision numerical simulations of binary black hole formation via the evolution of isolated binary stars, providing a framework to interpret GW150914 and predict the properties of subsequent binary black hole gravitational-wave events. Our models imply that these events form in an environment where the metallicity is less than 10 percent of solar; have initial masses of 40-100 Msun; and…
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