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As self-gravitating systems, dense star clusters exhibit a natural diffusion of energy from their innermost to outermost regions, which leads to a slow and steady contraction of the core until it ultimately collapses under gravity. However, in spite of the natural tendency toward so-called core collapse, the globular clusters (GCs) in the Milky Way exhibit a well-observed bimodal distribution in core radii separating the core-collapsed and non-core-collapsed clusters. This suggests an internal energy source is at work, delaying the onset of core collapse in many clusters. Primordial binary stars have been thought for a long time to provide this energy source, but recent analyses have cast doubt upon the corresponding binary-burning mechanism as a viable explanation. Over the past decade, a large amount of both observational and theoretical work has suggested that many stellar-mass black holes (BHs) are retained in typical clusters today and that they play a dynamically-significant role in these clusters throughout their entire lifetimes. Here we review our latest understanding of the formation and evolution of BH populations in GCs and demonstrate that, through their dynamical interaction with their host cluster, BHs can naturally explain the distinction between core-collapsed and non-core-collapsed clusters through a process we call black hole burning.
The detection of gravitational waves emitted during a neutron star - black hole merger and the associated electromagnetic counterpart will provide a wealth of information about stellar evolution nuclear matter, and General Relativity. While the theor
We present the first systematic study of strong binary-single and binary-binary black hole interactions with the inclusion of general relativity. When including general relativistic effects in strong encounters, dissipation of orbital energy from gra
Hierarchical triples are expected to be produced by the frequent binary-mediated interactions in the cores of globular clusters. In some of these triples, the tertiary companion can drive the inner binary to merger following large eccentricity oscill
LIGO and Virgo have reported the detection of GW190521, from the merger of a binary black hole (BBH) with a total mass around $150$ M$_odot$. While current stellar models limit the mass of any black hole (BH) remnant to about $40 - 50$ M$_odot$, more
Depending on the stellar type, more than $sim 50$% and $sim 15%$ of stars in the field have at least one and two stellar companions, respectively. Hierarchical systems can be assembled dynamically in dense star clusters, as a result of few-body encou