ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Two of the dominant channels to produce the black-hole binary mergers observed by LIGO and Virgo are believed to be the isolated evolution of stellar binaries in the field and dynamical formation in star clusters. Their relative efficiency can be characterized by a mixing fraction. Pair instabilities prevent stellar collapse from generating black holes more massive than about $45 M_odot$. This mass gap only applies to the field formation scenario, and it can be filled by repeated mergers in clusters. A similar reasoning applies to the binarys effective spin. If black holes are born slowly rotating, the high-spin portion of the parameter space (the spin gap) can only be populated by black hole binaries that were assembled dynamically. Using a semianalytical cluster model, we show that future gravitational-wave events in either the mass gap, the spin gap, or both can be leveraged to infer the mixing fraction between the field and cluster formation channels.
The LIGO and Virgo detectors have recently directly observed gravitational waves from several mergers of pairs of stellar-mass black holes, as well as from one merging pair of neutron stars. These observations raise the hope that compact object merge
The LIGO/Virgo Collaboration has recently observed GW190521, the first binary black hole merger with at least the primary component mass in the mass gap predicted by the pair-instability supernova theory. This observation disfavors the standard stell
Recently, the LIGO-Virgo collaborations have reported the coalescence of a binary involving a black hole and a low-mass gap object (LMGO) with mass in the range $sim2.5-5M_odot$. Such detections, challenge our understanding of the black hole and neut
Models for black hole (BH) formation from stellar evolution robustly predict the existence of a pair-instability supernova (PISN) mass gap in the range $sim50$ to $sim120$ solar masses. This theoretical prediction is supported by the binary black hol
Stellar evolution theory predicts a gap in the black hole birth function caused by the pair instability. Presupernova stars that have a core mass below some limiting value, Mlo, after all pulsational activity is finished, collapse to black holes, whe