Jumping the gap: searching for LIGO's biggest black holes
Jose Mar\'ia Ezquiaga, Daniel E. Holz

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential to detect and analyze very massive black hole binaries beyond the pair-instability supernova mass gap using current and future gravitational wave detectors, aiming to understand their rates, properties, and cosmological implications.
Contribution
It demonstrates how gravitational wave observations can constrain the upper edge of the black hole mass gap and use these massive binaries as standard sirens for cosmology.
Findings
Ground-based detectors can detect black holes above 50 solar masses.
Non-detections will set upper limits on merger rates of massive black holes.
Massive black holes can serve as standard sirens for measuring cosmic expansion.
Abstract
Gravitational wave (GW) detections of binary black holes (BBHs) have shown evidence for a dearth of component black holes with masses above . This is consistent with expectations of a mass gap due to the existence of pair-instability supernovae (PISN). We argue that ground-based GW detectors will be sensitive to BBHs with masses above this gap, . With no detections, two years at upgraded sensitivity (A+) would constrain the local merger rate of these BBHs on the "far side" of the PISN gap to be lower than . Alternatively, with a few tens of events we could constrain the location of the upper edge of the gap to the percent level. We consider the potential impact of "interloper" black holes within the PISN mass gap on this measurement. Far side BBHs would also be observed by future instruments such as Cosmic…
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