Merging Black Holes and Neutron Stars. All the Gravitational Wave Events Seen So Far in One Picture

The Theory of Relativity predicted the existence of black holes and neutron stars. Einstein gets the credit for the theory because of his paper published in 1915, even though other scientists’ work helped it along. But regardless of the minds behind it, the theory predicted black holes, neutron stars, and the gravitational waves from their mergers.

It took about one hundred years, but scientists finally observed these mergers and their gravitational waves in 2015. Since then, the LIGO/Virgo collaboration has detected many of them. The collaboration has released a new catalogue of discoveries, along with a new infographic. The new infographic displays the black holes, neutron stars, mergers, and the other uncertain compact objects behind some of them.

LIGO stands for Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory. LIGO is actually two facilities in the US, both built and operated by Caltech and MIT. LIGO’s collaborative partner is Virgo, an interferometer located in Italy. When they were observing between 2002 to 2010, they detected no gravitational waves and no mergers. Eventually, the facilities were upgraded, and in 2015 they detected their first merger.

That event was called GW150914 and resulted from a merger between a 36 stellar-mass black hole and a 29 stellar-mass black hole. That was a big deal. Three scientists behind the first observation were awarded a Nobel Prize, and the observation promised to open a whole new window into astronomy and cosmology. Now, the LIGO/Virgo collaboration detects a merger and gravitational waves about once every five days.

The infographic accompanies the new catalogue of gravitational waves and mergers published by LIGO/Virgo. The catalogue is called the GWTC-2, or Gravitational-Wave Transient Catalog-2. While the previous catalogue contained only 11 signals, this new one contains 50.

“We’re getting a richer picture of the population of gravitational-wave sources.”

Frank Ohme, Leader, Independent Max Planck Research Group at AEI Hannover

The signals come from all combinations of mergers between black holes and neutron stars.

The mergers of compact objects discovered so far by LIGO and Virgo (in O1, O2 and O3a). The diagram shows black holes (blue), neutron stars (orange) and compact objects of unknown nature (grey), which were detected by their gravitational-wave emission. Each merger of a binary system corresponds to three compact objects shown: the two merging objects and the result of the merger. A selection of black holes (violet) and neutron stars (yellow) discovered by electromagnetic observations is shown for comparison. Image Credit: LIGO Virgo Collaboration / Frank Elavsky, Aaron Geller / Northwestern
The mergers of compact objects discovered so far by LIGO and Virgo (in O1, O2 and O3a). The diagram shows black holes (blue), neutron stars (orange) and compact objects of unknown nature (grey), which were detected by their gravitational-wave emission. Each merger of a binary system corresponds to three compact objects shown: the two merging objects and the result of the merger. A selection of black holes (violet) and neutron stars (yellow) discovered by electromagnetic observations is shown for comparison. Image Credit: LIGO Virgo Collaboration / Frank Elavsky, Aaron Geller / Northwestern

The new catalogue contains some surprises. A pair of the detections were from the mergers of low-mass objects.

“One of our new discoveries, GW190426_152155, could be a merger of a black hole of around six solar masses with a neutron star. Unfortunately the signal is rather faint, so we cannot be entirely sure,” explains Serguei Ossokine, a senior scientist at AEI Potsdam. “GW190924_021846 certainly is from the merger of the two lightest black holes we’ve seen so far. One had the mass of 6 Suns, the other that of 9 Suns. There are signals from mergers with less massive objects like GW190814 but we don’t know for sure whether these are black holes.”

The new detections in the catalogue result from improvements in the LIGO/Virgo collaboration. Raw data processing has been improved, as well as how glitches or disturbances are dealt with. A press release says that these improvements will allow LIGO/Virgo to “listen deeper into the cosmos than ever before.”

“One key to finding a new gravitational-wave signal about once every five days over six months were the upgrades and improvements of the two LIGO detectors and the Virgo detector,” says Karsten Danzmann, director at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute; AEI) and director of the Institute for Gravitational Physics at Leibniz University Hannover. “Important roles played, for example, by the high-power lasers developed at AEI Hannover, new mirrors, and the reduction of background noise sources. This increased the volume in which our detectors could pick up the signal from, say, merging neutron stars by a factor of four!”

The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory is made up of two detectors, this one in Livingston, La., and one near Hanford, Wash. The detectors use giant arms in the shape of an "L" to measure tiny ripples in the fabric of the universe. Credit: Caltech/MIT/LIGO Lab
The Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory is made up of two detectors, this one in Livingston, La., and one near Hanford, Wash. The detectors use giant arms in the shape of an “L” to measure tiny ripples in the fabric of the universe. Credit: Caltech/MIT/LIGO Lab

On the surface of it, each of these events can appear similar. They’re all the result of mergers of black holes and/or neutron stars. But according to Frank Ohme, leader of an Independent Max Planck Research Group at AEI Hannover, observations are revealing more and more detail.

“When you look at the catalogue, there’s one thing all events have in common: They come from mergers of compact objects such as black holes or neutron stars. But if you look more closely, they all are quite different,” said Ohme. “We’re getting a richer picture of the population of gravitational-wave sources. The masses of these objects span a very wide mass range from about that of our Sun to more than 90 times that, some of them are closer to Earth, some of them are very far away.”

Researchers with LIGO/Virgo have also published four papers on their results. All three are up at arxiv.org, a pre-print server, and none have been peer-reviewed yet.

One of the highlights in the catalogue is GW190521, which is the most massive binary black hole merger with a total mass of 150 Suns and the first observation of the birth of an intermediate-mass black hole. Another is GW190425, which is most likely the second observation of a binary neutron star merger.

Visualization of the coalescence of two black holes that inspiral and merge, emitting gravitational waves. One black hole is 9.2 times more massive than the other and both objects are non-spinning. Image Credit: N. Fischer, S. Ossokine, H. Pfeiffer, A. Buonanno (Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics), Simulating eXtreme Spacetimes (SXS) Collaboration
Visualization of the coalescence of two black holes that inspiral and merge, emitting gravitational waves. One black hole is 9.2 times more massive than the other and both objects are non-spinning. Image Credit: N. Fischer, S. Ossokine, H. Pfeiffer, A. Buonanno (Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics), Simulating eXtreme Spacetimes (SXS) Collaboration

As time has passed, technology has produced ways of testing the predictive accuracy of Einstein’s theories. One of the new papers addresses how well the LIGO/Virgo detections have agreed with general relativity. It’s titled “Tests of General Relativity with the Compact Binary Signals from the LIGO-Virgo Catalog GWTC-2.” Einstein’s theory held up well—again—and according to a press release, the study found “no evidence for new physics beyond this theory.”

Another paper uses mergers and gravitational waves to come up with a new measurement for the Hubble constant. Its title is “A gravitational-wave measurement of the Hubble constant following the second observing run of Advanced LIGO and Virgo.” Rather than using standard candles, the paper makes use of “standard-sirens.” Standard siren refers to how the distance to a merger event is encoded in the gravitational waves that result from the event.

This new catalogue covers the first half of observing run three (O3), which ran from 1 November 2019 to 27 March 2020. LIGO/Virgo researchers have issued alerts for another 23 events in O3b, the second half of observing run three. But they’re only possible gravitational waves and haven’t been confirmed yet. After a more detailed analysis, some of them may be published.

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4 Replies to “Merging Black Holes and Neutron Stars. All the Gravitational Wave Events Seen So Far in One Picture”

  1. Thanks, nice population image!

    “Researchers with LIGO/Virgo have also published four papers on their results. All three are up at arxiv.org, a pre-print server, and none have been peer-reviewed yet.”

    I think I traced the root to this 3 or 4 paper description. The press release is from October 29, lists 4 papers and notes “The LIGO/Virgo researchers have published three papers accompanying their new catalog on the arXiv preprint server today.” The fourth paper, on tests of general relativity (which among other things lowered the estimated mass limit on the relativistic mass less graviton), was put there on March 11.

    And there is yet another paper, on a measurement of the Hubble rate, from August 16 which was just released in its third version, and linked here. It gets the H_0 = 69 (+16 -8) km s^-1 Mpc^-1, which is a common low-z result lately [“A 4?per?cent measurement of H0 using the cumulative distribution of strong lensing time delays in doubly imaged quasars”, D. Harvey, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 498, Issue 2, October 2020: H_0 = 71 (+2 -3) km?s^?1?Mpc^?1 from 27 lenses @ z < 0.8; "Mean Estimate Distances for Galaxies with Multiple Estimates in NED-D", I. Steer, The Astronomical Journal, Volume 160, Number 5, October 2020: H_0 = 70 km s^-1 Mpc^-1 from 12,000 galaxies with 6 different distance measurements @ z < 1.3]. All of them have H_0 < 72 km?s^?1?Mpc^?1, which needs no new physics and the simplest LCDM would remain valid..

  2. I wonder if when massive stars go supernova or in other types of powerful stellar occurrences asides from the main events if several small mass black holes, smaller than the mass of the Sun, are flung out into outer space as hypervelocity objects or objects that gravitationally settle and orbit around other masses, possibly merging with them? I was imagining, perhaps wrongly, what the compact objects of unknown nature were (In grey) when that prompted my question.

    1. That’s an interesting question. I wasn’t quite clear about what you were asking, but did you mean whether the black holes that form in the core of the exploding star are flung out, then “sometimes” is probably the answer. I believe that the kicks from the supernovae can recoil the stellar remnant with sufficient velocity to escape the galaxy (625km/s versus 537km/s). However, the chances of that 5-25 km wide object hitting anything en route would be incredibly small – a bit like trying to score a bullseye on a dart board from several hundred kilometers away. Moreover, the velocity is so high, that if it can escape the galaxy’s mass, the remnant won’t be captured by the mass of any star. Finally, as the Black Hole or Neutron Star approached another star, the gravitational pull of both would deflect their paths so they would most likely swing around one another. Collisions are highly unlikely. One such object passing through the solar system would scatter the planets into the void…

  3. Thanks for that steven04, more specifically, to clarify the issue , my question was on was on the “signals from mergers with less massive objects like GW190814′” which … “we don’t know for sure whether these are black holes.”

    Despite the very low probability, I’d still want to keep an eye out for hypervelocity black holes. The asteroid that caused the extinction of the dinosaurs also has a lowish probability of striking Earth, but it did. Apparently we already have the technology to register hyper velocity black holes which I ‘ve referenced below.

    After the last episode of Friday’s Astronomy cast and having asked whether hypervelocity stars were a possibility, which was answered live (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkrxGG32Ac4&t=3484s) I did another Google search on the matter. The first time, before the event, I’d done another search but I’d not found anything, though this 2nd time I found an article which very closely mirrored what I’d imagined in my relatively formally uniformed head. The article is entitled “Millions of High-Speed Black Holes Could Be Zooming Around The Milky Way” and it mentions that asides nobody knowing with much certainty how black holes are made ” it talks about the first observational evidence that you can actually see black holes moving with high velocities in the galaxy and associate it to the kick the black hole system received at birth.”

    As “there are potentially millions stellar-mass black holes zooming around the galaxy at high speed” I wonder if “signals from mergers with less massive objects like GW190814” are hypervelocity black holes?

    References

    Millions of High-Speed Black Holes Could Be Zooming Around The Milky Way

    https://www.sciencealert.com/there-could-be-a-whole-bunch-of-high-speed-black-holes-zooming-around-the-galaxy/amp?__twitter_impression=true

    (Above uses https://arxiv.org/abs/1908.07199 as reference.)

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