ArXiv TLDR

The LISA Astrophysics MBHcatalogues Project: A comparison of predictions of simulated massive black hole binaries

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2605.00092

David Izquierdo-Villalba, Melanie Habouzit, Matteo Bonetti, Silvia Bonoli, Alessia Gualandris + 65 more

astro-ph.GA

TLDR

This project compares 20 models of massive black hole merger rates, quantifying astrophysical uncertainties for LISA's detection capabilities.

Key contributions

  • Compares ~20 semi-analytical models and cosmological simulations of MBH mergers.
  • Quantifies the spread and astrophysical uncertainties in predicted LISA event rates.
  • Incorporates dynamical delays for black hole hardening and coalescence.
  • Examines how merger rates depend on seeding models and simulation resolution.

Why it matters

Understanding massive black hole merger rates is crucial for LISA's mission to constrain their origin and growth. This work provides a comprehensive comparison of current theoretical predictions, highlighting key uncertainties. It helps refine expectations for future gravitational wave observations.

Original Abstract

In the hierarchical paradigm of galaxy formation, central massive black holes (MBHs) are expected to coalesce after the merger of their host galaxies. One of the main goals of the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) is to constrain the origin and growth of MBHs through their merger rates and mass distribution. Predicting MBH merger rates requires not only tracing their statistical population from large to small physical scales (kpc to sub-pc) but also modelling their formation, accretion, dynamics, mergers, and their galactic physical processes across cosmic time. This project is the result of a large collaborative effort undertaken by the LISA Astrophysics Working Group, bringing together its collective expertise on MBH formation, evolution, and modelling, to build a comprehensive understanding of MBH merger rates across cosmic time. The project compares various theoretical predictions of MBH merger rates, quantifies the spread, and evaluates the global astrophysical uncertainties of the LISA event rates. To build a unique and complete view, our work is based on about 20 semi-analytical models and cosmological simulations from the literature, all employing distinct approaches to modelling MBH and galaxy physics. To compute the merger rates, we also incorporate delays arising from the dynamical phase of MBH hardening to coalescence. We present the expected LISA merger rates given current galaxy formation models and discuss how the merger rate depends on model assumptions, such as the seeding model and the resolution of cosmological simulations.

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