Host galaxy properties of mergers of stellar binary black holes and their implications for advanced LIGO gravitational wave sources

Abstract

Understanding the host galaxy properties of stellar binary black hole (SBBH) mergers is important for revealing the origin of the SBBH gravitational-wave sources detected by advanced LIGO and helpful for identifying their electromagnetic counterparts. Here we present a comprehensive analysis of the host galaxy properties of SBBHs by implementing semi-analytical recipes for SBBH formation and merger into cosmological galaxy formation model. If the time delay between SBBH formation and merger ranges from \,Gyr to the Hubble time, SBBH mergers at redshift z0.3 occur preferentially in big galaxies with stellar mass M*2×1010 and metallicities Z peaking at 0.6Z. However, the host galaxy stellar mass distribution of heavy SBBH mergers (M50) is bimodal with one peak at 109 and the other peak at 2×1010. The contribution fraction from host galaxies with Z0.2Z to heavy mergers is much larger than that to less heavy mergers. If SBBHs were formed in the early universe (e.g., z>6), their mergers detected at z0.3 occur preferentially in even more massive galaxies with M*>3×1010 and in galaxies with metallicities mostly 0.2Z and peaking at Z0.6Z, due to later cosmic assembly and enrichment of their host galaxies. SBBH mergers at z0.3 mainly occur in spiral galaxies, but the fraction of SBBH mergers occur in elliptical galaxies can be significant if those SBBHs were formed in the early universe; and about two thirds of those mergers occur in the central galaxies of dark matter halos. We also present results on the host galaxy properties of SBBH mergers at higher redshift.

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