Merging black hole binaries in galactic nuclei: implications for advanced-LIGO detections
Fabio Antonini, Frederic A. Rasio

TL;DR
This paper investigates how dense nuclear star clusters can dynamically form and merge black hole binaries, potentially explaining GW150914-like events and predicting detection rates for Advanced LIGO.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytical model showing nuclear star clusters can produce high-mass black hole mergers without low metallicity conditions.
Findings
Merger rate of ~1.5 Gpc^-3 yr^-1 from nuclear star clusters
Predicted detection of up to a few tens of events per year with Advanced LIGO
Nuclear star clusters could dominate local merger rates if black holes receive high natal kicks
Abstract
Motivated by the recent detection of gravitational waves from the black hole binary merger GW150914, we study the dynamical evolution of black holes in galactic nuclei where massive star clusters reside. With masses of ~10^7M_Sun and sizes of only a few parsecs, nuclear star clusters are the densest stellar systems observed in the local universe and represent a robust environment where (stellar mass) black hole binaries can dynamically form, harden and merge. We show that due to their large escape speeds, nuclear star clusters can keep a large fraction of their merger remnants while also evolving rapidly enough that the holes can sink back to the central regions where they can swap in new binaries that can subsequently harden and merge. This process can repeat several times and produce black hole mergers of several tens of solar masses similar to GW150914 and up to a few hundreds of…
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