Understanding the progenitor formation galaxies of merging binary black holes
Rahul Srinivasan, Astrid Lamberts, Marie Anne Bizouard, Tristan Bruel, and Simone Mastrogiovanni

TL;DR
This paper investigates the typical galactic environments where binary black hole mergers originate, analyzing how metallicity, galaxy mass, and redshift influence progenitor formation, providing insights into the origins of gravitational wave events.
Contribution
It synthesizes progenitor models across various parameters to infer galaxy properties and formation times, highlighting the role of metallicity and galaxy mass in black hole merger origins.
Findings
Over 50% of BBH mergers have progenitor metallicity of a few tenths Solar.
Heavy BBH mergers often originate from low-metallicity dwarf galaxies.
Detectable BBH progenitors tend to come from dwarf galaxies at redshift less than 1.
Abstract
With nearly a hundred gravitational wave detections, the origin of black hole mergers has become a key question. Here, we focus on understanding the typical galactic environment in which binary black hole mergers arise. To this end, we synthesize progenitors of binary black hole mergers as a function of the redshift of progenitor formation, present-day formation galaxy mass, and progenitor stellar metallicity for star formation and binary evolution models. We provide guidelines to infer the formation galaxy properties and time of formation, highlighting the interplay between the star formation rate and the efficiency of forming merging binary black holes from binary stars, both of which strongly depend on metallicity. We find that across models, over 50% of BBH mergers have a progenitor metallicity of a few tenths of Solar metallicity, however, inferring formation galaxy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
