Where are Gaia's small black holes?
M. Fishbach, K. Breivik, R. Willcox, L. A. C van Son

TL;DR
This paper investigates the apparent scarcity of low-mass black holes in Gaia's wide binary systems compared to gravitational-wave observations, exploring how natal kicks influence binary survival.
Contribution
It introduces a model comparing binary survival probabilities post-supernova to explain the mass gap discrepancy between Gaia and GW black hole populations.
Findings
Survival probability of binaries depends on natal kick strength and pre-supernova parameters.
Higher natal kicks can disrupt Gaia progenitors more, reducing low-mass BH formation in Gaia systems.
Parameter space mapping shows conditions favoring low-mass BHs in Gaia versus GW systems.
Abstract
Gaia has recently revealed a population of over 20 compact objects in wide astrometric binaries, while LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA (LVK) have observed around 100 compact object binaries as gravitational-wave (GW) mergers. Despite belonging to different systems, the compact objects discovered by both Gaia and the LVK follow a multimodal mass distribution, with a global maximum at neutron star (NS) masses (-) and a secondary local maximum at black hole (BH) masses . However, the relative dearth of objects, or ``mass gap," between these modes is more pronounced among the wide binaries observed by Gaia compared to the GW population, with of GW component masses falling between -- compared to of Gaia compact objects. We explore whether this discrepancy can be explained by the natal kicks received by low-mass BHs. GW…
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