Second-Generation Mass Peak in the Gravitational-Wave Population as a Probe of Globular Clusters
Yonadav Barry Ginat, Fabio Antonini, Elizabeth Flanagan, Mark Gieles

TL;DR
This paper proposes that a second mass peak near 70 solar masses in gravitational-wave data can serve as a robust indicator of dynamical formation in dense stellar environments like globular clusters, offering insights into black hole populations.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking the second mass peak to second-generation mergers, constrains globular cluster properties, and discusses implications for black hole formation theories.
Findings
A second mass peak near 70 M_ot is predicted for dynamical formation scenarios.
Current data already constrain globular cluster birth properties.
A mass gap in secondary black holes is not a definitive signature of cluster origin.
Abstract
Gravitational-wave observations have revealed an excess of binary black hole mergers with primary masses near . We show that if this feature originates from dynamical formation in dense stellar systems, and if the pair-instability supernova truncates the first-generation black hole mass spectrum, then second-generation mergers inevitably produce a second peak near . This structure reflects the suppression of first-generation black holes above a characteristic mass and the accumulation of merger remnants near twice that scale. Its location is robust, whereas its amplitude depends strongly on cluster initial conditions. Using a large suite of cluster population-synthesis models, we show that current gravitational-wave data already constrain the birth properties of globular clusters, irrespective of their overall contribution to the observed population.…
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