Giacomo Fragione (Racah Institute for Physics)
The recent discovery of gravitational waves has opened new horizons for physics. Current and upcoming missions, such as LIGO, VIRGO, KAGRA, and LISA, promise to shed light on black holes of every size from stellar mass (SBH) sizes up to supermassive black holes which reside in galactic nuclei. The intermediate mass black hole (IMBH) family has not been detected beyond any reasonable doubt neither directly nor indirectly. Recent analyses suggest observational evidence for the presence of IMBHs in the centers of two Galactic globular clusters. In this paper, we investigate the possibility that globular clusters were born with a central IMBH, which undergo repeated merger events with SBHs in the cluster core. By means of a semi-analytical method, we follow the evolution of the primordial cluster population in the galactic potential and the Gravitational Wave (GW) mergers of the binary IMBH-SBH systems. Our models predict ~IMBHs within 1 kpc from the Galactic Center. Our results show that the IMBH-SBH merger rate density changes from R~1000 Gpc^-3 yr^-1 beyond z~2 to R~1-10 Gpc^-3 yr^-1 at z~0. The rates at low redshifts may be significantly higher if young massive star clusters host IMBHs. The merger rates are dominated by IMBHs with masses between 10^3 and 10^4 solar masses. Currently, there are no LIGO/VIRGO upper limits for GW sources in this mass range, but at design sensitivity, these instruments may detect these IMBH-SBH mergers in the coming years. LISA and the Einstein Telescope will be best suited to detect these GW events. The inspirals of IMBH-SBH systems may also generate an unresolved GW background.
Katarzyna Drozd (NCAC, Warsaw)
Based on: "Studying the Ultraviolet Spectrum of the First Spectroscopically Confirmed Supernova at Redshift Two", Smith, M., 2018, ApJ, 854, 37S
Prof. Jean-Pierre Lasota (NCAC, Warsaw)
Based on https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-018-0391-6./
POLNS (NCAC, Warsaw)