4.6 Article

On the merger rate of primordial black holes: effects of nearest neighbours distribution and clustering

Journal

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2018/10/043

Keywords

dark matter theory; primordial black holes

Funding

  1. Contrato de Atraccion de Talento (Modalidad 1) de la Comunidad de Madrid (Spain) [2017-T1/TIC-5520]
  2. ERC Advanced Grant SPLE [ERC-2012-ADG-20120216-32042]
  3. MINECO (Spain) [FPA2016-78022-P]
  4. Centro de Excelencia Severo Ochoa Program (Spain) [SEV-2016-0597]
  5. TAsP (Theoretical Astroparticle Physics) - Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN)

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One of the seemingly strongest constraints on the fraction of dark matter in the form of primordial black holes (PBH) of O (10) M-circle dot relies on the merger rate inferred from the binary BH merger events detected by LIGO/Virgo. The robustness of these bounds depends however on the accuracy with which the formation of PBH binaries in the early Universe can be described. We revisit the standard estimate of the merger rate, focusing on a couple of key ingredients: the spatial distribution of nearest neighbours and the initial clustering of PBHs associated to a given primordial power spectrum. Overall, we confirm the robustness of the results presented in the literature in the case of a narrow mass function (which constrain the PBH fraction of dark matter to be f(PBH) less than or similar to 0.001-0.01). The initial clustering of PBHs might have an effect tightening the current constraint, but only for very broad mass functions, corresponding to wide bumps in the primordial power spectra extending at least over a couple of decades in k-space.

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