Black Hole Mergers from Star Clusters with Top-Heavy Initial Mass Functions
Newlin C. Weatherford, Giacomo Fragione, Kyle Kremer, Sourav, Chatterjee, Claire S. Ye, Carl L. Rodriguez, Frederic A. Rasio

TL;DR
This study models globular clusters with top-heavy initial mass functions, revealing they produce more black holes, undergo rapid dissolution, and significantly contribute to gravitational wave sources detectable by LIGO/Virgo.
Contribution
It introduces new GC models with varying IMFs, showing the impact of top-heavy IMFs on cluster evolution, black hole formation, and gravitational wave event rates.
Findings
Top-heavy IMFs lead to rapid cluster mass loss within a few Gyr.
Clusters with top-heavy IMFs produce many more binary black hole mergers.
Some models form intermediate-mass black holes exceeding 100 solar masses.
Abstract
Recent observations of globular clusters (GCs) provide evidence that the stellar initial mass function (IMF) may not be universal, suggesting specifically that the IMF grows increasingly top-heavy with decreasing metallicity and increasing gas density. Non-canonical IMFs can greatly affect the evolution of GCs, mainly because the high end determines how many black holes (BHs) form. Here we compute a new set of GC models, varying the IMF within observational uncertainties. We find that GCs with top-heavy IMFs lose most of their mass within a few Gyr through stellar winds and tidal stripping. Heating of the cluster through BH mass segregation greatly enhances this process. We show that, as they approach complete dissolution, GCs with top-heavy IMFs can evolve into 'dark clusters' consisting of mostly BHs by mass. In addition to producing more BHs, GCs with top-heavy IMFs also produce many…
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