The merger rate of primordial-black-hole binaries
Yacine Ali-Ha\"imoud (1), Ely D. Kovetz (2), Marc Kamionkowski (2), ((1) NYU, (2) JHU)

TL;DR
This paper revisits the merger rate of primordial black hole binaries, finding that early Universe formed binaries could dominate the merger rate and strongly constrain PBHs as dark matter candidates based on LIGO observations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analytic estimate of PBH binary formation and merger rates, considering tidal effects, halo interactions, and accretion, refining previous models and implications for dark matter constraints.
Findings
Early Universe PBH binaries likely dominate merger rates.
LIGO constraints limit PBHs to less than 1% of dark matter.
Merger rates could exceed current observational upper limits.
Abstract
Primordial black holes (PBHs) have long been a candidate for the elusive dark matter (DM), and remain poorly constrained in the ~20-100 Msun mass range. PBH binaries were recently suggested as the possible source of LIGO's first detections. In this paper, we thoroughly revisit existing estimates of the merger rate of PBH binaries. We compute the probability distribution of orbital parameters for PBH binaries formed in the early Universe, accounting for tidal torquing by all other PBHs, as well as standard large-scale adiabatic perturbations. We then check whether the orbital parameters of PBH binaries formed in the early Universe can be significantly affected between formation and merger. Our analytic estimates indicate that the tidal field of halos and interactions with other PBHs, as well as dynamical friction by unbound standard DM particles, do not do significant work on nor torque…
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