Stellar-mass black holes in star clusters: Implications for gravitational-wave radiation

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Abstract

We study the dynamics of stellar-mass black holes (BHs) in star clusters, with particular attention to the formation of BH-BH binaries, which are interesting as sources of gravitational waves (GWs). We examine the properties of these BH-BH binaries through direct N-body simulations of Plummer clusters of N ≤ 105 low-mass stars with an initial population of stellar-mass BHs, using the NBODY6 code. We find that the stellar-mass BHs segregate rapidly into the cluster core and form a dense subcluster of BHs in which BH-BH binaries form through three-body encounters. While most BH binaries are ejected from the cluster by recoils due to superelastic encounters with the single BHs, we find that for clusters with N ≳ 5 × 104, typically a few of them harden sufficiently so that they can merge via GW emission within the cluster. Also, for each of such clusters there are a few escaping BH binaries that merge within a Hubble time, with most merger times being within a few Gyr. These results imply that the intermediate-age massive clusters constitute the most important class of star cluster candidates that can produce dynamical BH-BH mergers at the present epoch. The BH-BH merger rates obtained from our computations imply a significant detection rate (∼ 30 yr -1) for the proposed Advanced LIGO GW detector. © International Astronomical Union 2010.

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Banerjee, S., Baumgardt, H., & Kroupa, P. (2009). Stellar-mass black holes in star clusters: Implications for gravitational-wave radiation. Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union, 5(S266), 213–218. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743921309991074

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