Do gravitational wave observations in the lower mass gap favor a hierarchical triple origin?
V. Gayathri, I. Bartos, S. Rosswog, M.C. Miller, D. Veske, W. Lu, S., Marka

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether the lower mass gap objects observed in gravitational wave events are more consistent with a neutron star merger origin than with other mass distribution models, suggesting a potential common formation pathway.
Contribution
It provides evidence favoring a neutron star merger origin for the lower mass gap objects in GW190814 and GW200210_092254, and explores their possible common progenitor masses.
Findings
Neutron star merger origin is favored over other mass distribution models.
The secondary masses of GW190814 and GW200210_092254 are statistically similar.
A common progenitor mass model is preferred for the primary and secondary objects.
Abstract
Observations of compact objects in Galactic binaries have provided tentative evidence of a dearth of masses in the so-called lower mass gap M. Nevertheless, two such objects have been discovered in gravitational-wave data from LIGO and Virgo. Remarkably, the estimated masses of both secondaries in the coalescences GW190814 (M) and GW200210_092254 (M) fall near the total mass of M of observed Galactic binary neutron star systems. The more massive components of the two binaries also have similar masses. Here we show that a neutron star merger origin of the lighter components in GW190814 and GW200210_092254 is favored over (Bayes factor ) and uniform () mass distributions in the lower mass gap. We also examine the statistical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · High-pressure geophysics and materials
