# Counting Black Holes: The Cosmic Stellar Remnant Population and   Implications for LIGO

**Authors:** Oliver D. Elbert, James S. Bullock, and Manoj Kaplinghat

arXiv: 1703.02551 · 2017-11-08

## TL;DR

This paper develops an empirical model linking stellar evolution remnants to gravitational wave black hole mergers, predicting host galaxy populations and informing expectations for future LIGO detections.

## Contribution

It introduces a novel empirical approach to interpret black hole merger signals based on galaxy stellar mass and metallicity relationships, connecting stellar remnants to gravitational wave observations.

## Key findings

- Milky Way hosts millions of ~30 M_sun black holes.
- Dwarf galaxies like Draco host ~100 such black holes.
- Merger rate densities from LIGO are consistent with ~1% black hole binary involvement.

## Abstract

We present an empirical approach for interpreting gravitational wave signals of binary black hole mergers under the assumption that the underlying black hole population is sourced by remnants of stellar evolution. Using the observed relationship between galaxy mass and stellar metallicity, we predict the black hole count as a function of galaxy stellar mass. We show, for example, that a galaxy like the Milky Way should host millions of $\sim 30~M_\odot$ black holes and dwarf satellite galaxies like Draco should host $\sim 100$ such remnants, with weak dependence on the assumed IMF and stellar evolution model. Most low-mass black holes ($\sim10 M_\odot$) typically reside within massive galaxies ($M_\star \simeq 10^{11} M_\odot$) while massive black holes ($\sim 50~M_\odot$) typically reside within dwarf galaxies ($M_\odot \simeq 10^9 M_\odot$) today. If roughly $1\%$ of black holes are involved in a binary black hole merger, then the reported merger rate densities from Advanced LIGO can be accommodated for a range of merger timescales, and the detection of mergers with $> 50~M_\odot$ black holes should be expected within the next decade. Identifying the host galaxy population of the mergers provides a way to constrain both the binary neutron star or black hole formation efficiencies and the merger timescale distributions; these events would be primarily localized in dwarf galaxies if the merger timescale is short compared to the age of the universe and in massive galaxies otherwise. As more mergers are detected, the prospect of identifying the host galaxy population, either directly through the detection of electromagnetic counterparts of binary neutron star mergers or indirectly through the anisotropy of the events, will become a realistic possibility.

## Full text

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## Figures

8 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.02551/full.md

## References

68 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.02551/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.02551