Growth of Massive Black Hole Seeds by Migration of Stellar and Primordial Black Holes: Gravitational Waves and Stochastic Background
Lumen Boco, Andrea Lapi, Alex Sicilia, Giulia Capurri, Carlo, Baccigalupi, Luigi Danese

TL;DR
This paper explores how massive black hole seeds grow through the migration and merging of stellar remnants and primordial black holes, predicting gravitational wave signals that could be detected by future observatories.
Contribution
It introduces the role of primordial black holes in seed growth and predicts the gravitational wave background from their mergers, extending previous models.
Findings
Primordial black hole mergers significantly contribute to initial seed growth.
Detected gravitational waves could confirm the seed growth mechanism.
Predicted stochastic background spans a wide frequency range, distinct from other sources.
Abstract
We investigate the formation and growth of massive black hole (BH) seeds in dusty star-forming galaxies, relying and extending the framework proposed by Boco et al. 2020. Specifically, the latter envisages the migration of stellar compact remnants (neutron stars and stellar-mass black holes) via gaseous dynamical friction towards the galaxy nuclear region, and their subsequent merging to grow a massive central BH seed. In this paper we add two relevant ingredients: (i) we include primordial BHs, that could constitute a fraction of the dark matter, as an additional component participating in the seed growth; (ii) we predict the stochastic gravitational wave background originated during the seed growth, both from stellar compact remnant and from primordial BH mergers. We find that the latter events contribute most to the initial growth of the central seed during a timescale…
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