Prediction of Multiple Features in the Black Hole Mass Function due to Pulsational Pair-Instability Supernovae
Abstract
Using high-resolution simulations of black hole formation from the direct collapse of massive stars undergoing pulsational pair-instability supernovae (PPISN), we find a new phenomenon which significantly affects the explosion and leads to two peaks in the resulting black hole mass function (BHMF). Lighter stars experiencing the pair-instability can form a narrow shell in which alpha ladder reactions take place, exacerbating the effect of the PPISN. The shell temperature in higher mass stars (>62 M at the onset of helium burning for population-III stars with metallicity Z=10-5) is too low for this to occur. As a result, the spectrum of black holes M BH (Mi) exhibits a shoulder feature whereby a large range of initial masses result in near-identical black hole masses. PPISN therefore predict two peaks in the mass function of astrophysical black holes -- one corresponding to the location of the upper black hole mass gap and a second corresponding to the location of the shoulder. This shoulder effect may explain the peak at 35-2.9+1.7 M in the LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA GWTC-3 catalog of merging binary black holes.
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