Primordial black hole mergers from three-body interactions
Gabriele Franciolini, Konstantinos Kritos, Emanuele Berti, and Joseph, Silk

TL;DR
This paper investigates three-body interactions as a formation channel for primordial black hole binaries, showing it produces merger rates similar to dynamical capture but is constrained by current dark matter bounds, supporting strong limits on PBH abundance.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of three-body interactions in PBH halos as a significant binary formation mechanism, contrasting it with existing models and providing updated merger rate estimates.
Findings
Three-body interactions can efficiently form PBH binaries at high redshift.
The merger rates from this channel are comparable to dynamical capture.
Current constraints rule out this channel as a dominant contributor unless PBHs are a major dark matter component.
Abstract
Current gravitational-wave observations set the most stringent bounds on the abundance of primordial black holes (PBHs) in the solar mass range. This constraint, however, inherently relies on the merger rate predicted by PBH models. Previous analyses have focused mainly on two binary formation mechanisms: early Universe assembly out of decoupling from the Hubble expansion and dynamical capture in present-day dark matter structures. Using reaction rates of three-body processes studied in the astrophysical context, we show that, under conservative assumptions, three-body interactions in PBH halos efficiently produce binaries. Those binaries form at high redshift in Poisson-induced PBH small-scale structures and a fraction is predicted to coalesce and merge within the current age of the Universe, at odds with the dynamical capture scenario where they merge promptly. In general, we find…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
