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GW190814: gravitational waves from the coalescence of a 23 solar mass black hole with a 2.6 solar mass compact object

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-20, 03:34 authored by R Abbott, TD Abbott, Karelle SiellezKarelle Siellez
We report the observation of a compact binary coalescence involving a 22.2–24.3 M⊙ black hole and a compact object with a mass of 2.50–2.67 M⊙ (all measurements quoted at the 90% credible level). The gravitational-wave signal, GW190814, was observed during LIGO's and Virgo's third observing run on 2019 August 14 at 21:10:39 UTC and has a signal-to-noise ratio of 25 in the three-detector network. The source was localized to 18.5 deg2 at a distance of 241+41-45 Mpc; no electromagnetic counterpart has been confirmed to date. The source has the most unequal mass ratio yet measured with gravitational waves, 0.112+0.008-0.009, and its secondary component is either the lightest black hole or the heaviest neutron star ever discovered in a double compact-object system. The dimensionless spin of the primary black hole is tightly constrained to ≤0.07. Tests of general relativity reveal no measurable deviations from the theory, and its prediction of higher-multipole emission is confirmed at high confidence. We estimate a merger rate density of 1–23 Gpc3 yr−1 for the new class of binary coalescence sources that GW190814 represents. Astrophysical models predict that binaries with mass ratios similar to this event can form through several channels, but are unlikely to have formed in globular clusters. However, the combination of mass ratio, component masses, and the inferred merger rate for this event challenges all current models of the formation and mass distribution of compact-object binaries.

History

Publication title

The Astrophysical Journal Letters

Volume

896

Issue

2

Article number

L44

Number

L44

Pagination

20

ISSN

2041-8205

Department/School

Physics

Publisher

Institute of Physics Publishing Ltd.

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

United Kingdom

Rights statement

Copyright (2020) The American Astronomical Society. Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported (CC BY 3.0) licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).

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