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Merger Rates of Black-Hole Binaries: Prospects for Gravitational-Wave Detectors.

Authors :
Kaper, Lex
Heuvel, Edward P. J. van den
Woudt, Patrick A.
Zwart, Simon Portegies
McMillan, Stephen L. W.
Source :
Black Holes in Binaries & Galactic Nuclei: Diagnostics, Demography & Formation; 2001, p252-258, 7p
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

Mergers of black-hole binaries are expected to release large amounts of energy in the form of gravitational radiation. However, binary evolution models predict merger rates too low to be of observational interest. In this paper we explore the possibility that black holes become members of close binaries via dynamical interactions with other stars in dense stellar systems. In star clusters, black holes become the most massive objects within a few tens of millions of years; dynamical relaxation then causes them to sink to the cluster core, where they form binaries. These black-hole binaries become more tightly bound by superelastic encounters with other cluster members, and are ultimately ejected from the cluster. The majority of escaping black-hole binaries have orbital periods short enough and eccentricities high enough that the emission of gravitational waves causes them to coalesce within a few billion years. We predict a black-hole merger rate of 10-8 to 10-7 per year per cubic megaparsec, implying gravitational-wave detection rates substantially greater than the corresponding rates from neutron star mergers. For the first generation Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO-I), we expect about one detection during the first two years of operation. For its successor LIGO-II, the rate rises to roughly one detection per day. There is about an order of magnitude uncertainty in these numbers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISBNs :
9783540415817
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Black Holes in Binaries & Galactic Nuclei: Diagnostics, Demography & Formation
Publication Type :
Book
Accession number :
32945383
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/10720995_55