Dynamical formation of Gaia BH3 in the progenitor globular cluster of the ED-2 stream
Daniel Mar\'in Pina, Sara Rastello, Mark Gieles, Kyle Kremer, Laura, Fitzgerald, Bruno Rando Forastier

TL;DR
This paper investigates the dynamical formation of the Gaia BH3 black hole binary within a globular cluster progenitor of the ED-2 stream, using Monte Carlo models to explore cluster properties and black hole retention.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Gaia BH3 likely originated from a low-mass globular cluster that retained many black holes and dissolved to form the ED-2 stream, providing new insights into black hole formation in clusters.
Findings
A low-mass (~10^5 M_sun) globular cluster can produce and retain black hole binaries.
Approximately 75% of black hole binaries are ejected early, while 25% remain in streams.
Galactic halo contains about 10^5 black hole binaries formed in clusters, detectable by Gaia.
Abstract
Context. The star-black hole (S-BH) binary known as Gaia BH3, discovered by the Gaia Collaboration is chemically and kinematically associated with the metal-poor ED-2 stream in the Milky Way halo. Aims. We explore the possibility that Gaia BH3 was assembled dynamically in the progenitor globular cluster (GC) of the ED-2 stream. Methods. We used a public suite of star-by-star dynamical Monte Carlo models to identify S-BH binaries in GCs with different initial masses and (half-mass) radii. Results. We show that a likely progenitor of the ED-2 stream was a relatively low-mass () GC with an initial half-mass radius of ~4 pc. Such a GC can dynamically retain a large fraction of its BH population and dissolve on the orbit of ED-2. From the suite of models we find that GCs produce ~ 3 - 30 S-BH binaries, approximately independent of initial GC mass and inversely…
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