
TL;DR
This paper reviews observational evidence for stellar black hole formation via implosion without supernova explosions, highlighting insights from binary kinematics, massive star observations, and gravitational wave detections, supporting models of direct collapse.
Contribution
It synthesizes diverse observational data to support the theory that many stellar black holes form through direct implosion without significant matter ejection or natal kicks.
Findings
Evidence of black hole formation without large natal kicks.
Dark collapse of massive stars observed in optical/infrared.
Gravitational wave detections consistent with direct collapse models.
Abstract
It is believed that stellar black holes (BHs) can be formed in two different ways: Either a massive star collapses directly into a BH without a supernova (SN) explosion, or an explosion occurs in a proto-neutron star, but the energy is too low to completely unbind the stellar envelope, and a large fraction of it falls back onto the short-lived neutron star (NS), leading to the delayed formation of a BH. Theoretical models set progenitor masses for BH formation by implosion, namely, by complete or almost complete collapse, but observational evidences have been elusive. Here are reviewed the observational insights on BHs formed by implosion without large natal kicks from: (1) the kinematics in three dimensions of space of five Galactic BH X-ray binaries (BH-XRBs), (2) the diversity of optical and infrared observations of massive stars that collapse in the dark, with no luminous SN…
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