A Dynamical Survey of Stellar-Mass Black Holes in 50 Milky Way Globular Clusters
Newlin C. Weatherford, Sourav Chatterjee, Kyle Kremer, and Frederic A., Rasio

TL;DR
This study estimates the current populations and total black hole mass in 50 Milky Way globular clusters by analyzing stellar mass segregation, revealing significant black hole retention in several clusters.
Contribution
It introduces a method to indirectly estimate black hole populations in globular clusters using mass segregation measurements and applies it to 50 Milky Way clusters.
Findings
Identified clusters with large black hole populations exceeding 10^3 solar masses.
Matched observed mass segregation distributions with model predictions.
Provided the narrowest constraints to date on black hole retention in these clusters.
Abstract
Recent numerical simulations of globular clusters (GCs) have shown that stellar-mass black holes (BHs) play a fundamental role in driving cluster evolution and shaping their present-day structure. Rapidly mass-segregating to the center of GCs, BHs act as a dynamical energy source via repeated super-elastic scattering, delaying onset of core collapse and limiting mass segregation for visible stars. While recent discoveries of BH candidates in Galactic and extragalactic GCs have further piqued interest in BH-mediated cluster dynamics, numerical models show that even if significant BH populations remain in today's GCs, they are typically in configurations that are not directly detectable. We demonstrated in Weatherford et al. (2018) that an anti-correlation between a suitable measure of mass segregation () in observable stellar populations and the number of retained BHs in GC…
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