Double black hole mergers in nuclear star clusters: eccentricities, spins, masses, and the growth of massive seeds
Debatri Chattopadhyay, Jakob Stegmann, Fabio Antonini, Jordan Barber,, Isobel M. Romero-Shaw

TL;DR
This paper explores how hierarchical mergers in nuclear star clusters can produce intermediate mass black holes, with specific focus on their masses, spins, eccentricities, and implications for gravitational wave detection.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytical model for black hole mergers in nuclear star clusters, highlighting the formation of IMBHs and their properties, including eccentricity and spin distributions.
Findings
IMBHs of 10^2 to 10^4 solar masses can form within a few Gyrs.
High-mass IMBHs (>10^3 solar masses) tend to have low spins (~0.15).
Eccentric mergers are common in dense, metal-rich clusters and detectable by current GW detectors.
Abstract
We investigate the formation of intermediate mass black holes (IMBHs) through hierarchical mergers of stellar origin black holes (BHs), as well as BH mergers formed dynamically in nuclear star clusters. Using a semi-analytical approach which incorporates probabilistic mass-function-dependent double BH (DBH) pairing, binary-single encounters, and a mass-ratio-dependent prescription for energy dissipation in hardening binaries, we find that IMBHs with masses of - can be formed solely through hierarchical mergers in timescales of a few Myrs to a few Gyrs. Clusters with escape velocities km s inevitably form high-mass IMBHs. The spin distribution of IMBHs with masses M is strongly clustered at ; while for lower masses, it peaks at . Eccentric mergers are more frequent for equal-mass…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
