No evidence for a dip in the binary black hole mass spectrum
Christian Adamcewicz, Paul D. Lasky, Eric Thrane, Ilya Mandel

TL;DR
This study investigates the predicted mass gap in binary black hole populations due to stellar evolution models, analyzing gravitational-wave data to find no evidence of such a gap.
Contribution
The paper provides the first direct observational test of the predicted black hole mass gap using gravitational-wave data, finding no evidence for it.
Findings
No observed dip in the binary black hole mass distribution.
The mass gap, if it exists, is unlikely to be detectable with current data.
Results suggest the stellar models' predicted mass gap may not manifest in observed black hole populations.
Abstract
Stellar models indicate that the core compactness of a star, which is a common proxy for its explodability in a supernova, does not increase monotonically with the star's mass. Rather, the core compactness dips sharply over a range of carbon-oxygen core masses; this range may be somewhat sensitive to the star's metallicity and evolutionary history. Stars in this compactness dip are expected to experience supernovae leaving behind neutron stars, whereas stars on either side of this range are expected to form black holes. This results in a hypothetical mass range in which black holes should seldom form. Quantitatively, when applied to binary stripped stars, these models predict a dearth of binary black holes with component masses . The population of gravitational-wave signals indicates potential evidence for a dip in the distribution of chirp masses of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics
