Reexamining Evidence of a Pair-Instability Mass Gap in the Binary Black Hole Population.

ORAL

Abstract

The fourth gravitational wave transient catalog~(GWTC-4) has enabled empirical probes of the theorized pair-instability gap in the higher end of the binary black hole~(BBH) mass-spectrum. In this letter, using flexibly parametrized models, we show that at present there is no evidence of a sharp drop-off in the spectrum of black hole masses near $~40-50M_{\odot}$. We simultaneously characterize the transition in the distribution of BBH mass-ratios, effective aligned and effective precessing spins using our flexible models. From the transitions in our inferred spin and mass-ratio distributions, we find that the high-mass broad-spin sub-population has a significant fraction~($52^{+18}_{-23}\%$) of systems with mass ratios in the range $0.6-1$. This suggests that alternatives to the hypothesis of 2G+1G hierarchical systems dominating BBH formation above $\sim 40-50 M_{\odot}$ are more consistent with the GWTC-4 detection sample. By comparing with the predictions of star cluster simulations, we further show that contributions from (2G+2G) systems are not abundant enough to alleviate this discrepancy. We also demonstrate the effects of strong model assumptions on this inference, which can lead to biased astrophysical interpretation from restricted priors. We note that our results do not exclude that a high-mass gap may be identified as our sample size increases. We constrain the lower bound on the location of a possible PISN cutoff still allowed within measurement uncertainties to be $(57^{+17}_{-10}M_{\odot})$ and discuss its implications on the S factor of $^{12}\mathrm{C}(\alpha, \gamma)^{16}O$ at 300 kev.

*A.R. was supported by the National Science Foundation~(NSF) award PHY-2207945. V.K. was supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (grant awards GBMF8477 and GBMF12341), through a Guggenheim Fellowship, and the D.I. Linzer Distinguished University Professorship fund. We are grateful for the computational resources provided by the LIGO laboratory and supported by National Science Foundation Grants PHY-0757058 and PHY-0823459. This material is based upon work supported by NSF's LIGO Laboratory, which is a major facility fully funded by the National Science Foundation. This research has made use of data obtained from the gravitational Wave Open Science Center (gwosc.org), a service of LIGO Laboratory, the LIGO scientific Collaboration, the Virgo Collaboration, and KAGRA. We gratefully acknowledge the support of the NSF-Simons AI-Institute for the Sky (SkAI) via grants NSF AST-2421845 and Simons Foundation MPS-AI-00010513.

Publication: https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.18867

Presenters

  • Anarya Ray

    • Northwestern University

Authors

  • Anarya Ray

    • Northwestern University
  • Vicky Kalogera

    • Northwestern University