Bulge Fossil Fragments as a new population of factories of gravitational wave sources in the Galaxy
F. R. Ferraro, E. Vesperini, B. Lanzoni, D. Romano, L. Origlia, C. Pallanca, C. Fanelli, F. Calura, E. Dalessandro, D. Massari, G. Zullo, M. Cadelano

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of Bulge Fossil Fragments, like Terzan5, as significant sources of gravitational waves due to their high expected binary black hole merger rates, surpassing typical globular clusters.
Contribution
It presents the first estimate of binary black hole merger rates from Bulge Fossil Fragments, highlighting their importance in gravitational wave source populations.
Findings
Hundreds of binary BH mergers expected per BFF, 15-250 times more than globular clusters.
BFFs could be key sites for forming intermediate-mass black holes.
BFFs may significantly contribute to the gravitational wave background.
Abstract
The discovery of the complex stellar populations hosted in two massive stellar systems in the Galactic bulge, namely Terzan5 and Liller 1, posed intriguing questions about their origin. Despite their globular cluster appearance, they host sub-populations with significantly different ages (several Gyrs) and metallicities (about 1 dex) tracing a chemical abundance pattern that is consistent only with that observed in the bulge. These surprising properties can be naturally explained in the context of a self-enrichment scenario, opening the possibility that they could be the remnants of primordial massive structures that contributed to the bulge formation (the so-called Bulge Fossil Fragments, BFFs) capable of retaining supernova ejecta within their potential well. In this paper we present a first attempt to quantify the expected contribution of BFFs to the gravitational wave emission. In…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
