Hints of spin-magnitude correlations and a rapidly spinning subpopulation of binary black holes
Asad Hussain, Maximiliano Isi, Aaron Zimmerman

TL;DR
This paper analyzes gravitational wave data to identify two distinct subpopulations of binary black holes based on their spin magnitudes, revealing a dominant low-spin group and a smaller, potentially rapidly spinning group, with implications for their formation channels.
Contribution
It introduces a hierarchical inference method to identify and characterize two subpopulations of binary black holes with different spin properties from GWTC-3 data, including signs of a rapidly spinning subgroup.
Findings
Support for two subpopulations with >95% credibility.
Evidence of an anticorrelation between spin magnitudes.
Identification of a small, rapidly spinning subpopulation.
Abstract
The complex astrophysical processes leading to the formation of binary black holes and their eventual merger are imprinted on the spins of the individual black holes. We revisit the astrophysical distribution of those spins based on gravitational waves from the third gravitational wave transient catalog GWTC-3, (Abbott et al. 2023a), looking for structure in the two-dimensional space defined by the dimensionless spin magnitudes of the heavier () and lighter () component black holes. We find support for two distinct subpopulations with greater than credibility. The dominant population is made up of black holes with small spins, preferring for the primary and for the secondary; we report signs of an anticorrelation between and , as well as as evidence against a subpopulation of binaries in which both…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
