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Resolving the Stellar-Collapse and Hierarchical-Merger Origins of the Coalescing Black Holes

39

Citations

70

References

2024

Year

Abstract

Spin and mass properties provide essential clues in distinguishing the origins of coalescing black holes (BHs). With a dedicated semiparametric population model for the coalescing binary black holes (BBHs), we identify two distinct categories of BHs among the GWTC-3 events, which is favored over the one population scenario by a logarithmic Bayes factor (lnB) of 7.5. One category, with a mass ranging from ∼25M_{⊙} to ∼80M_{⊙}, is distinguished by the high spin magnitudes (∼0.75) and consistent with the hierarchical merger origin. The other category, characterized by low spins, has a sharp mass cutoff at ∼40M_{⊙}, which is natural for the stellar-collapse origin and in particular the pair-instability explosion of massive stars. We infer the local hierarchical merger rate density as 0.46_{-0.24}^{+0.61} Gpc^{-3} yr^{-1}. Additionally, we find that a fraction of the BBHs has a cosine-spin-tilt-angle distribution concentrated preferentially around 1, and the fully isotropic distribution for spin orientation is disfavored by a lnB of -6.3, suggesting that the isolated field evolution channels are contributing to the total population.

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