Detectability of a spatial correlation between stellar-mass black hole mergers and Active Galactic Nuclei in the Local Universe
Niccol\`o Veronesi, Elena Maria Rossi, Sjoert van Velzen, Riccardo, Buscicchio

TL;DR
This study assesses the potential to detect a spatial correlation between stellar-mass black hole mergers and Active Galactic Nuclei in the local universe using statistical methods, considering current and future gravitational wave observations.
Contribution
It introduces a likelihood ratio method to statistically evaluate the connection between BBH mergers and AGN, accounting for different detector configurations and AGN luminosity categories.
Findings
Current 13 BBH detections cannot confirm no-connection with luminous AGN at 3σ.
Rarer, more luminous AGN categories can be tested with existing data.
Future O4 observations could determine the AGN contribution to BBH mergers above 80%.
Abstract
The origin of the Binary Black Hole (BBH) mergers detected through Gravitational Waves (GWs) by the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA (LVK) collaboration remains debated. One fundamental reason is our ignorance of their host environment, as the typical size of an event's localization volume can easily contain thousands of galaxies. A strategy around this is to exploit statistical approaches to assess the spatial correlation between these mergers and astrophysically motivated host galaxy types, such as Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN). We use a Likelihood ratio method to infer the degree of GW-AGN connection out to . We simulate BBH mergers whose components' masses are sampled from a realistic distribution of the underlying population of Black Holes (BHs). Localization volumes for these events are calculated assuming two different interferometric network configurations. These correspond to the…
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