Gravitational Waves from the Cosmic Dawn: Tracing Cosmic Black Hole Binaries with ET, LGWA and LISA
Nazanin Davari, Rosa Valiante, Alessandro Trinca, Raffaella Schneider, Riccardo Caleno + 6 more
TLDR
This study models early universe binary black hole merger rates and GW signatures, revealing how accretion physics impacts detectability by future observatories.
Key contributions
- Predicts merger rates and gravitational wave signatures for cosmic binary black holes (z>=4).
- Uses the Cosmic Archaeology Tool (CAT) and GWFish to model BH evolution under different accretion scenarios.
- Shows Eddington-limited (EL) accretion favors equal-mass binaries, while super-Eddington (SE) leads to lower mass ratios.
- Finds SE growth significantly increases LISA detection rates (~64 yr^-1) compared to EL (~32 yr^-1).
Why it matters
This research is crucial for interpreting future gravitational wave observations from next-generation detectors like LISA and ET. By clarifying how early black hole growth models affect detectable signals, it provides a diagnostic tool to understand the cosmic dawn and the evolution of the first black holes.
Original Abstract
Next generation detectors, such as LISA, LGWA, and ET will, for the first time, probe the high redshift Universe, offering unique insight into the birth, growth, and dynamics of the first black holes (BHs) during their earliest stages formation. We aim to predict merger rates and gravitational wave (GW) signatures of "cosmic" binary BHs, forming as a result of galaxy mergers, at z>=4. We investigate how BH seeding, accretion physics and dynamical delays affect their properties and detectability across cosmic epochs. We use the semi-analytic model Cosmic Archaeology Tool (CAT) to trace the evolution and delayed-mergers, driven by dynamical friction, of BH binaries formed from light, medium-weight and heavy seeds, under Eddington-limited (EL) and super-Eddington (SE) accretion prescriptions. We employ the GWFish package to evaluate their GW signals and detectability by LISA, LGWA and ET. Our results show the impact of BH accretion and seeding prescriptions on the properties and distribution of detectable sources. In the EL model, the detected populations are dominated by nearly equal-mass binaries. In contrast, SE growth leads to lower mass ratios for LISA detections and medium ratios for ET and LGWA. We present the total detection rates predicted under the two accretion scenarios. The SE model allows BHs to grow faster, transferring a significant fraction of detectable systems from the ET band to the LISA band, compared to the EL model. As a result, the predicted LISA detection rate increases from ~32 yr^-1 in the EL case to ~64 yr^-1 in the SE scenario, and the ET detection rate reduces from ~64 yr^-1 in the EL model to only ~4 yr^-1 in the SE scenario. LGWA yields comparable detection rates in both scenarios (~21 yr^-1 in EL and ~12 yr^-1 in SE). The combined information encoded in mass ratios, redshift evolution and merger rates emerge as a promising diagnostic of early BH growth.
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