The Black Hole Mass Function from Gravitational Wave Measurements
Ely D. Kovetz, Ilias Cholis, Patrick C. Breysse, Marc Kamionkowski

TL;DR
Future gravitational-wave observations of merging black holes can precisely determine the black-hole mass function and merger rates, shedding light on stellar evolution, binary formation, and the existence of primordial black holes.
Contribution
This paper demonstrates how gravitational-wave data can constrain the black-hole mass function, merger rates, and binary properties, including testing primordial black hole hypotheses.
Findings
Mass function parameters can be measured to <10% accuracy within a few years.
The upper mass cutoff and mass gap can be constrained.
Primordial black hole scenarios can be tested with GW data.
Abstract
We examine how future gravitational-wave measurements from merging black holes (BHs) can be used to infer the shape of the black-hole mass function, with important implications for the study of star formation and evolution and the properties of binary BHs. We model the mass function as a power law, inherited from the stellar initial mass function, and introduce lower and upper mass cutoff parameterizations in order to probe the minimum and maximum BH masses allowed by stellar evolution, respectively. We initially focus on the heavier BH in each binary, to minimize model dependence. Taking into account the experimental noise, the mass measurement errors and the uncertainty in the redshift-dependence of the merger rate, we show that the mass function parameters, as well as the total rate of merger events, can be measured to <10% accuracy within a few years of advanced LIGO observations at…
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