CWRU PAT Coffee Agenda

Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30

+1 Interpreting LIGO/Virgo "Mass-Gap" events as lensed Neutron Star-Black Hole binaries.

oxg34 +1

+1 Breakdown of the Einstein's Equivalence Principle for a quantum body.

oxg34 +1

+1 Holographic baby universes: an observable story.

lxj154 +1

0 Using The Baryonic Tully-Fisher Relation to Measure $H_o$.

bump   cjc5 +1

0 Observation of Excess Electronic Recoil Events in XENON1T.

bump   cjc5 +1

Showing votes from 2020-06-23 11:30 to 2020-06-26 12:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday Aug 12th, 10:30 am.

users

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.CO

  • Interpreting LIGO/Virgo "Mass-Gap" events as lensed Neutron Star-Black Hole binaries.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Tom Broadhurst, Jose M. Diego, George F. Smoot
     

    Gravitational lensing allows the detection of binary black holes (BBH) at cosmological distances with chirp masses that appear to be enhanced by $1+z$ in the range $1<z<4$, in good agreement with the reported BBH masses. We propose this effect also accounts for the puzzling "mass gap" events (MG) newly reported by LIGO/Virgo, as distant, lensed NSBH events with $1<z<4$. The fitted mass of the neutron star member becomes $(1+z)\times 1.4M_\odot$, and is therefore misclassified as a low mass black hole. In this way, we derive a redshift of $z\simeq 3.5$ and $z\simeq 1.0$ for two newly reported "mass asymmetric" events GW190412 \& GW190814, by interpreting them as lensed NSBH events, comprising a stellar mass black hole and neutron star. Over the past year an additional 31 BBH events and 5 MG events have been reported with high probability ($>95\%$), from which we infer a factor $\simeq 5$ higher intrinsic rate of NSBH events than BBH events, reflecting a higher proportion of neutron stars formed by early star formation. We predict a distinctive locus for lensed NSBH events in the observed binary mass plane, spanning $1<z<4$ with a narrow mass ratio, $q \simeq 0.2$, that can be readily tested when the waveform data are unlocked. All such events may show disrupted NS emission and are worthy of prompt follow-up as the high lensing magnification means EM detections are not prohibitive despite the high redshifts that we predict. Such lensed NSBH events provide an exciting prospect of directly charting the history of coalescing binaries via the cosmological redshift of their waveforms, determined relative to the characteristic mass of the neutron star member.

astro-ph.HE

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.GA

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.IM

  • No papers in this section today!

gr-qc

  • No papers in this section today!

hep-ph

  • No papers in this section today!

hep-th

  • No papers in this section today!

hep-ex

  • No papers in this section today!

quant-ph

  • No papers in this section today!

other

  • No papers in this section today!