On the single-event-based identification of primordial black hole mergers at cosmological distances
Ken K. Y. Ng, Shiqi Chen, Boris Goncharov, Ulyana Dupletsa, Ssohrab, Borhanian, Marica Branchesi, Jan Harms, Michele Maggiore, B. S., Sathyaprakash, Salvatore Vitale

TL;DR
This study explores the potential to identify primordial black hole mergers at high redshifts using future gravitational wave detectors, demonstrating that redshift measurements can distinguish primordial origins with high confidence.
Contribution
It introduces a method to infer the primordial origin of black hole mergers at cosmological distances through single-event redshift measurements with next-generation GW detectors.
Findings
High-confidence redshift estimation for primordial black holes at z>30.
Network configuration impacts the measurement confidence.
Dependence on Bayesian priors affects the inference accuracy.
Abstract
The existence of primordial black holes (PBHs), which may form from the collapse of matter overdensities shortly after the Big Bang, is still under debate. Among the potential signatures of PBHs are gravitational waves (GWs) emitted from binary black hole (BBH) mergers at redshifts , where the formation of astrophysical black holes is unlikely. Future ground-based GW detectors, Cosmic Explorer and Einstein Telescope, will be able to observe equal-mass BBH mergers with total mass of at such distances. In this work, we investigate whether the redshift measurement of a single BBH source can be precise enough to establish its primordial origin. We simulate BBHs of different masses, mass ratios and orbital orientations. We show that for BBHs with total masses between and merging at one can infer at…
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