A follow-up on intermediate-mass black hole candidates in the second LIGO–Virgo observing run with the Bayes Coherence Ratio

Author:

Vajpeyi Avi12ORCID,Smith Rory12ORCID,Thrane Eric12ORCID,Ashton Gregory123ORCID,Alford Thomas4,Garza Sierra4,Isi Maximiliano5ORCID,Kanner Jonah4ORCID,Massinger T J4,Xiao Liting4

Affiliation:

1. School of Physics and Astronomy, Monash University , Clayton VIC 3800, Australia

2. OzGrav: The ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery , Clayton VIC 3800, Australia

3. Department of Physics, Royal Holloway, University of London , Egham TW20 0EX, United Kingdom

4. LIGO Laboratory, California Institute of Technology , Pasadena, CA 91125, USA

5. Center for Computational Astrophysics , Flatiron Institute, 162 5th Ave, New York, NY 10010, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT The detection of an intermediate-mass black hole population (102–106 M⊙) will provide clues to their formation environments (e.g. discs of active galactic nuclei, globular clusters) and illuminate a potential pathway to produce supermassive black holes. Ground-based gravitational-wave detectors are sensitive to mergers that can form intermediate-mass black holes weighing up to ∼450 M⊙. However, ground-based detector data contain numerous incoherent short duration noise transients that can mimic the gravitational-wave signals from merging intermediate-mass black holes, limiting the sensitivity of searches. Here, we follow-up on binary black hole merger candidates using a ranking statistic that measures the coherence or incoherence of triggers in multiple-detector data. We use this statistic to rank candidate events, initially identified by all-sky search pipelines, with lab-frame total masses ≳ 55 M⊙ using data from LIGO’s second observing run. Our analysis does not yield evidence for new intermediate-mass black holes. However, we find support for eight stellar-mass binary black holes not reported in the first LIGO–Virgo gravitational wave transient catalogue GWTC-1, seven of which have been previously reported by other catalogues.

Funder

National Science Foundation

CPU

Science and Technology Facilities Council

Australian Research Council

CNRS

INFN

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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