3,264 research outputs found
The Origin of OB Runaway Stars
About 20% of all massive stars in the Milky Way have unusually high
velocities, the origin of which has puzzled astronomers for half a century. We
argue that these velocities originate from strong gravitational interactions
between single stars and binaries in the centers of star clusters. The ejecting
binary forms naturally during the collapse of a young (\aplt 1\,Myr) star
cluster. This model replicates the key characteristics of OB runaways in our
galaxy and it explains the \apgt 100\,\Msun\, runaway stars around young star
clusters, e.g. R136 and Westerlund~2. The high proportion and the distributions
in mass and velocity of runaways in the Milky Way is reproduced if the majority
of massive stars are born in dense and relatively low-mass (5000-10000 \Msun)
clusters.Comment: to appear in Scienc
Black hole mergers in the universe
Mergers of black-hole binaries are expected to release large amounts of
energy in the form of gravitational radiation. However, binary evolution models
predict merger rates too low to be of observational interest. In this paper we
explore the possibility that black holes become members of close binaries via
dynamical interactions with other stars in dense stellar systems. In star
clusters, black holes become the most massive objects within a few tens of
millions of years; dynamical relaxation then causes them to sink to the cluster
core, where they form binaries. These black-hole binaries become more tightly
bound by superelastic encounters with other cluster members, and are ultimately
ejected from the cluster. The majority of escaping black-hole binaries have
orbital periods short enough and eccentricities high enough that the emission
of gravitational radiation causes them to coalesce within a few billion years.
We predict a black-hole merger rate of about per year per
cubic megaparsec, implying gravity wave detection rates substantially greater
than the corresponding rates from neutron star mergers. For the first
generation Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO-I), we
expect about one detection during the first two years of operation. For its
successor LIGO-II, the rate rises to roughly one detection per day. The
uncertainties in these numbers are large. Event rates may drop by about an
order of magnitude if the most massive clusters eject their black hole binaries
early in their evolution.Comment: 12 pages, ApJL in pres
Comparing compact binary parameter distributions I: Methods
Being able to measure each merger's sky location, distance, component masses,
and conceivably spins, ground-based gravitational-wave detectors will provide a
extensive and detailed sample of coalescing compact binaries (CCBs) in the
local and, with third-generation detectors, distant universe. These
measurements will distinguish between competing progenitor formation models. In
this paper we develop practical tools to characterize the amount of
experimentally accessible information available, to distinguish between two a
priori progenitor models. Using a simple time-independent model, we demonstrate
the information content scales strongly with the number of observations. The
exact scaling depends on how significantly mass distributions change between
similar models. We develop phenomenological diagnostics to estimate how many
models can be distinguished, using first-generation and future instruments.
Finally, we emphasize that multi-observable distributions can be fully
exploited only with very precisely calibrated detectors, search pipelines,
parameter estimation, and Bayesian model inference
A runaway collision in a young star cluster as the origin of the brightest supernova
Supernova 2006gy in the galaxy NGC 1260 is the most luminous one recorded
\cite{2006CBET..644....1Q, 2006CBET..647....1H, 2006CBET..648....1P,
2006CBET..695....1F}. Its progenitor might have been a very massive (
\msun) star \cite{2006astro.ph.12617S}, but that is incompatible with hydrogen
in the spectrum of the supernova, because stars \msun are believed to
have shed their hydrogen envelopes several hundred thousand years before the
explosion \cite{2005A&A...429..581M}. Alternatively, the progenitor might have
arisen from the merger of two massive stars \cite{2007ApJ...659L..13O}. Here we
show that the collision frequency of massive stars in a dense and young cluster
(of the kind to be expected near the center of a galaxy) is sufficient to
provide a reasonable chance that SN 2006gy resulted from such a bombardment. If
this is the correct explanation, then we predict that when the supernova fades
(in a year or so) a dense cluster of massive stars becomes visible at the site
of the explosion
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