Binary neutron-star mergers will predominantly produce black-hole remnants of mass ∼3-4 M, thus populating the putative low-mass gap between neutron stars and stellar-mass black holes. If these low-mass black holes are in dense astrophysical environments, mass segregation could lead to "second-generation" compact binaries merging within a Hubble time. In this paper, we investigate possible signatures of such low-mass compact binary mergers in gravitational-wave observations. We show that this unique population of objects, if present, will be uncovered by the third-generation gravitational-wave detectors, such as Cosmic Explorer and Einstein Telescope. Future joint measurements of chirp mass M and effective spin χeff could clarify the formation scenario of compact objects in the low-mass gap. As a case study, we show that the recent detection of GW190425 (along with GW170817) favors a double Gaussian mass model for neutron stars, under the assumption that the primary in GW190425 is a black hole formed from a previous binary neutron-star merger.

Gupta, A., Gerosa, D., Arun, K., Berti, E., Farr, W., Sathyaprakash, B. (2020). Black holes in the low-mass gap: Implications for gravitational-wave observations. PHYSICAL REVIEW D, 101(10) [10.1103/PhysRevD.101.103036].

Black holes in the low-mass gap: Implications for gravitational-wave observations

Gerosa D.;
2020

Abstract

Binary neutron-star mergers will predominantly produce black-hole remnants of mass ∼3-4 M, thus populating the putative low-mass gap between neutron stars and stellar-mass black holes. If these low-mass black holes are in dense astrophysical environments, mass segregation could lead to "second-generation" compact binaries merging within a Hubble time. In this paper, we investigate possible signatures of such low-mass compact binary mergers in gravitational-wave observations. We show that this unique population of objects, if present, will be uncovered by the third-generation gravitational-wave detectors, such as Cosmic Explorer and Einstein Telescope. Future joint measurements of chirp mass M and effective spin χeff could clarify the formation scenario of compact objects in the low-mass gap. As a case study, we show that the recent detection of GW190425 (along with GW170817) favors a double Gaussian mass model for neutron stars, under the assumption that the primary in GW190425 is a black hole formed from a previous binary neutron-star merger.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
black holes, gravitational waves, general relativity, relativistic astrophysics
English
2020
101
10
103036
none
Gupta, A., Gerosa, D., Arun, K., Berti, E., Farr, W., Sathyaprakash, B. (2020). Black holes in the low-mass gap: Implications for gravitational-wave observations. PHYSICAL REVIEW D, 101(10) [10.1103/PhysRevD.101.103036].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/325568
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