1 / 19

BH Dynamics in Globular Clusters

BH Dynamics in Globular Clusters. Ryan M. O’Leary, Natalia Ivanova, Frederic A. Rasio Northwestern University. Astrophysical Motivation. LIGO detection of BH-BH binary mergers in star clusters (Portegies Zwart & McMillan 2000) How often? When? Possible IMBH (~10 3 M  ) formation

elani
Télécharger la présentation

BH Dynamics in Globular Clusters

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BH Dynamics in Globular Clusters Ryan M. O’Leary, Natalia Ivanova, Frederic A. Rasio Northwestern University

  2. Astrophysical Motivation • LIGO detection of BH-BH binary mergers in star clusters (Portegies Zwart & McMillan 2000) • How often? When? • Possible IMBH (~103 M) formation • Detection by LISA • Ultraluminous X-ray sources, i.e. MGG11 in M32 (Matsumoto et al. 2001; Strohmayer & Mushotzky 2003) • M15 and G1 in M31 (Gerssen et al. 2002,2003; van der Marel et al. 2002; Gebhardt, Rich, & Ho 2002; Baumgardt et al. 2003)

  3. Initial BH Population • We expect ~ 10-4 - 10-3 N BHs from stellar evolution (Salpeter, Standard Kroupa initial mass functions respectively) • Globular Clusters N ~ 105 – 106 • Expect a broad mass spectrum of BHs (Belczynski, Sadowski, & Rasio 2004)

  4. Dynamics • BHs concentrate in the core through mass segregation (Fregeau et al. 2002) • Decouple dynamically from rest of cluster, because most massive objects (Spitzer Instability) • BHs only interact with other BHs

  5. BH core dynamics • 3-body and 4-body interactions dominate • BH-BH binaries continuously harden • Get ejected from purely Newtonian recoil or merge from gravitational radiation (Peters 1964) • Binaries evolve from gravitational radiation (Peters 1964) • Recoil from gravitational wave emission in asymmetric BH-BH mergers (Fitchett 1983, Favata, Hughes, & Holz 2004) • Insignificant factors • Secular evolution of triples (Kozai Mechanism) • GR Bremsstrahlung (completely ignore, velocities too low)

  6. Previous Studies • Portegies Zwart & McMillan (2000) • Small direct N-body simulations without GR (NBH ~ 20, N =2048 or 4096) • Start all single 10 M BHs • 30% of BHs ejected in tight BH-BH binaries • 60% of BHs ejected as single BHs • <10% retained in cluster

  7. Previous Studies Escape Velocity km s-1 • Gültekin, Miller, & Hamiltonastro-ph/0402532 • Repeatedly interact 10 MBHs. Include GR between interactions. • Find efficiency too low to grow very massive objects. • Most interactions lead to some sort of ejection, not merger

  8. Our Method and Assumptions • Use realistic distribution of BH masses and binary separation(Belczynski, Sadowski, & Rasio 2004)

  9. BH Mass Function

  10. Our Method and Assumptions • Use realistic distribution of BH masses and binary separation (Belczynski, Sadowski, & Rasio 2004) • Place into constant density core and compute all interactions (3-body and 4-body) by direct integration (Using FewbodyFregeau et al. 2004) • Eject into Halo if necessary, reintroduce BHs from dynamical friction • Evolve binaries between interactions Peters (1964) • In some simulations, account for GR recoil (Fitchett 1983, Favata, Hughes, & Holz 2004)

  11. Results nc = 5 x 105 pc-3 σBH = 11.5 km s-1 trh = 3.2 x 108 yr M = 5 x 105 M NBH = 512 W0 = 9

  12. Results – Chirp Masses nc = 5 x 105 pc-3 σBH = 11.5 km s-1 trh = 3.2 x 108 yr M = 5 x 105 M NBH = 512 W0 = 9

  13. Results - eccentricity nc = 5 x 105 pc-3 σBH = 11.5 km s-1 trh = 3.2 x 108 yr M = 5 x 105 M NBH = 512 W0 = 9 Frequency of radiation two times orbital frequency

  14. Results nc = 5 x 105 pc-3 σBH = 11.5 km s-1 trh = 3.2 x 108 yr M = 5 x 105 M NBH = 512 W0 = 9 Mean Final BH Mass: 104 M Largest BH Mass: 295 M Standard Dev: 85 M Of 64 Runs

  15. Results – GR Recoil Maximum Recoil Velocity Core Escape Velocity: 57.6 km s-1 Halo Escape Velocity: 29.6 km s-1 Max. GR Recoil Vel vs. Avg Mass

  16. Conclusions • Clusters important factories for LIGO sources • Almost all mergers have negligible eccentricity • Chirp masses high with realistic mass function • Can detect mergers to larger distances, earlier times • Possible to get growth to IMBH • Mass spectrum of BHs contributes to more efficient BH-BH merger rate

  17. Chirp masses with recoil 20 Runs

  18. Probability distribution of mergers vs. time

  19. Eccentricity Dependence on Chirp mass

More Related