A follow-up on intermediate-mass black hole candidates in the second LIGO-Virgo observing run with the Bayes Coherence Ratio
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.
- Publication:
-
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
- Pub Date:
- November 2022
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2107.12109
- Bibcode:
- 2022MNRAS.516.5309V
- Keywords:
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- gravitational waves;
- methods: data analysis;
- methods: statistical;
- black hole mergers;
- General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology;
- Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena;
- Physics - Data Analysis;
- Statistics and Probability
- E-Print:
- 10 pages, 3 figures