Hierarchical black hole mergers in young, globular and nuclear star clusters: the effect of metallicity, spin and cluster properties
Michela Mapelli, Marco Dall'Amico, Yann Bouffanais, Nicola Giacobbo,, Manuel Arca Sedda, M. Celeste Artale, Alessandro Ballone, Ugo N. Di Carlo,, Giuliano Iorio, Filippo Santoliquido, Stefano Torniamenti

TL;DR
This study investigates hierarchical black hole mergers across different star cluster types, highlighting how metallicity, cluster properties, and dynamics influence black hole masses, merger rates, and the formation of intermediate-mass black holes.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of black hole merger characteristics in nuclear, globular, and young star clusters, emphasizing the effects of metallicity and cluster escape velocity on black hole mass growth.
Findings
Median black hole mass is larger in GCs and YSCs than in NSCs.
Metallicity significantly affects the mass of black holes in mergers.
Fraction of mergers involving pair-instability mass gap black holes varies with cluster type.
Abstract
We explore hierarchical black hole (BH) mergers in nuclear star clusters (NSCs), globular clusters (GCs) and young star clusters (YSCs), accounting for both original and dynamically assembled binary BHs (BBHs). We find that the median mass of both first- and nth-generation dynamical mergers is larger in GCs and YSCs with respect to NSCs, because the lighter BHs are ejected by supernova kicks from the lower-mass clusters. Also, first- and nth-generation BH masses are strongly affected by the metallicity of the progenitor stars: the median mass of the primary BH of a nth-generation merger is M ( M) in metal-poor (metal-rich) NSCs. The maximum BH mass mainly depends on the escape velocity: BHs with mass up to several thousand M form in NSCs, while YSCs and GCs host BHs with mass up to several hundred M. Furthermore, we calculate the…
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