No evidence that the binary black hole mass distribution evolves with redshift
Max Lalleman, Kevin Turbang, Thomas Callister, Nick van Remortel

TL;DR
This study analyzes gravitational wave data to determine if the mass distribution of binary black holes changes with redshift, finding no significant evidence for such evolution up to redshift 1.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic survey of redshift evolution in binary black hole mass distribution using GWTC-3 data, constraining possible changes in key features.
Findings
No evidence of evolution in the 35 M_sun peak with redshift.
The power-law slope remains constant below redshift 1.
Current data do not require a redshift-dependent mass spectrum.
Abstract
The mass distribution of merging binary black holes is generically predicted to evolve with redshift, reflecting systematic changes in their astrophysical environment, stellar progenitors, and/or dominant formation channels over cosmic time. Whether or not such an effect is observed in gravitational-wave data, however, remains an open question, with some contradictory results present in the literature. In this paper, we study the ensemble of binary black holes within the latest GWTC-3 catalog released by the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration, systematically surveying for possible evolution of their mass distribution with redshift. We specifically focus on two key features present in the binary black hole primary mass distribution -- (1) an excess of black holes and (2) a broad power-law continuum ranging from 10 to -- and ask if one or both of these…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Relativity and Gravitational Theory
