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The LIGO-Virgo-Kagra collaboration (LVC) discovered recently GW190521, a gravitational wave (GW) source associated with the merger between two black holes (BHs) with mass $66$ M$_odot$ and $>85$ M$_odot$. GW190521 represents the first BH binary (BBH) merger with a primary mass falling in the upper mass-gap and the first leaving behind a $sim 150$ M$_odot$ remnant. So far, the LVC reported the discovery of four further mergers having a total mass $>100$ M$_odot$, i.e. in the intermediate-mass black holes (IMBH) mass range. Here, we discuss results from a series of 80 $N$-body simulations of young massive clusters (YMCs) that implement relativistic corrections to follow compact object mergers. We discover the development of a GW190521-like system as the result of a 3rd-generation merger, and four IMBH-BH mergers with total mass $~(300-350)$ M$_odot$. We show that these IMBH-BH mergers are low-frequency GW sources detectable with LISA and DECIGO out to redshift $z=0.01-0.1$ and $z>100$, and we discuss how their detection could help unravelling IMBH natal spins. For the GW190521 test case, we show that the 3rd-generation merger remnant has a spin and effective spin parameter that matches the $90%$ credible interval measured for GW190521 better than a simpler double merger and comparably to a single merger. Due to GW recoil kicks, we show that retaining the products of these mergers require birth-sites with escape velocities $gtrsim 50-100$ km s$^{-1}$, values typically attained in galactic nuclei and massive clusters with steep density profiles.
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
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