TY - JOUR
T1 - A fixed point for black hole distributions
AU - Gálvez Ghersi, José T.
AU - Stein, Leo C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 IOP Publishing Ltd.
PY - 2021/2/19
Y1 - 2021/2/19
N2 - Understanding distributions of black holes is crucial to both astrophysics and quantum gravity. Studying astrophysical population statistics has even been suggested as a channel to constrain black hole formation from the quantum vacuum. Here we propose a Gedankenexperiment to show that the non-linear properties of binary mergers (simulated with accurate surrogate models) generate an attractor in the space of distributions. Our results show that the joint distribution of spin magnitude and fractional mass loss evolves to a fixed point, converging in a few generations. The features of this fixed point distribution do not depend on the choice of the initial distributions in the range of mass ratios that we are able to probe. Since a black hole merger is irreversible it produces entropy - possibly the largest source of entropy in the Universe. The fixed-point distributions are neither isothermal nor isentropic, and initially thermodynamic states evolve away from thermality. We finally evaluate the specific entropy production rate per merger from initially thermal and non-thermal distributions, which converges to a constant.
AB - Understanding distributions of black holes is crucial to both astrophysics and quantum gravity. Studying astrophysical population statistics has even been suggested as a channel to constrain black hole formation from the quantum vacuum. Here we propose a Gedankenexperiment to show that the non-linear properties of binary mergers (simulated with accurate surrogate models) generate an attractor in the space of distributions. Our results show that the joint distribution of spin magnitude and fractional mass loss evolves to a fixed point, converging in a few generations. The features of this fixed point distribution do not depend on the choice of the initial distributions in the range of mass ratios that we are able to probe. Since a black hole merger is irreversible it produces entropy - possibly the largest source of entropy in the Universe. The fixed-point distributions are neither isothermal nor isentropic, and initially thermodynamic states evolve away from thermality. We finally evaluate the specific entropy production rate per merger from initially thermal and non-thermal distributions, which converges to a constant.
KW - attractors in the space of black hole distributions
KW - binary mergers
KW - entropy production
KW - fixed-point distributions
KW - post-merger parameters
KW - thermal configurations
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85099029207&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1088/1361-6382/abcfd2
DO - 10.1088/1361-6382/abcfd2
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85099029207
SN - 0264-9381
VL - 38
JO - Classical and Quantum Gravity
JF - Classical and Quantum Gravity
IS - 4
M1 - 045012
ER -