The black hole retention fraction in star clusters
V\'aclav Pavl\'ik, Tereza Je\v{r}\'abkov\'a, Pavel Kroupa, Holger, Baumgardt

TL;DR
This study uses direct N-body simulations and analytic models to estimate black hole retention fractions in star clusters, constraining natal kick velocities and showing that more compact, massive clusters retain a significant portion of their black holes.
Contribution
It provides the first direct simulation-based constraints on black hole retention fractions considering various cluster parameters and compares results with analytic estimates and observational data.
Findings
Clusters with initial radius 2 pc and mass > 5x10^3 M_sun retain >20% of BHs for σ_BH < 50 km/s.
Analytic models agree well with N-body simulations in estimating BH retention.
Ultra-compact dwarf galaxies can retain >80% of BHs if σ_BH ≤ 190 km/s.
Abstract
Recent research has been constraining the retention fraction of black holes (BHs) in globular clusters by comparing the degree of mass segregation with -body simulations. They are consistent with an upper limit of the retention fraction being or less. In this work, we focus on direct simulations of the dynamics of BHs in star clusters. We aim to constrain the effective distribution of natal kicks that BHs receive during supernova (SN) explosions and to estimate the BH retention fraction. We used the collisional -body code nbody6 to measure the retention fraction of BHs for a given set of parameters, which are: the initial mass of a star cluster, the initial half-mass radius, and , which sets the effective Maxwellian BH velocity kick distribution. We compare these direct -body models with our analytic estimates and newest observational constraints.…
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