The Binary Black Hole Merger Rate from Ultraluminous X-ray Source Progenitors
Justin D. Finke, Soebur Razzaque

TL;DR
This paper models the connection between ultraluminous X-ray sources and binary black hole mergers, estimating merger rates and mass distributions consistent with gravitational wave observations, and predicts future testable outcomes.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking ULX formation to BBH mergers, incorporating metallicity effects and accretion rates, to explain observed gravitational wave events.
Findings
The model reproduces the observed BBH merger rate and mass distribution.
Predicted BBH merger rates and properties are testable by ALIGO.
ULX accretion rates are inferred to be 1-300 times Eddington.
Abstract
Ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) exceed the Eddington luminosity for a black hole. The recent detection of black hole mergers by the gravitational wave detector ALIGO indicates that black holes with masses do indeed exist. Motivated by this, we explore a scenario where ULXs consist of black holes formed by the collapse of high-mass, low-metallicity stars, and that these ULXs become binary black holes (BBHs) that eventually merge. We use empirical relations between the number of ULXs and the star formation rate and host galaxy metallicity to estimate the ULX formation rate and the BBH merger rate at all redshifts. This assumes the ULX rate is directly proportional to the star formation rate for a given metallicity, and that the black hole accretion rate is distributed as a log-normal distribution. We include an enhancement in the ULX formation rate at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Mechanics and Biomechanics Studies
