Observations of Stellar-Mass Black Holes in the Galaxy [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2304.09368


Stellar-mass black holes (BHs), with masses comparable to stars, are a major constituent of our Milky Way galaxy. This chapter describes the landscape of challenging, and long-sought efforts to identify these objects in the Galaxy. The first stellar-mass BHs were identified as persistent, but highly variable cosmic X-ray sources. Later, transient BH candidates were detected, and now far outnumber the persistent sources. Decades of effort have also yielded candidate BHs via gravitational microlensing and their orbital effect on binary companions. Populations of BH systems have begun to emerge from these detection strategies, offering insight into the astrophysical context in which BHs exist and driving questions about the formation, assembly, and ongoing evolution of these enigmatic objects.

Read this paper on arXiv…

M. MacLeod and J. Grindlay
Thu, 20 Apr 23
26/57

Comments: This chapter is the pre-print of the version currently in production. Please cite this chapter as the following: M. MacLeod and J. Grindlay “Observations of Stellar-Mass Black Holes in the Galaxy,” in The Encyclopedia of Cosmology (Set 2): Black Holes, edited by Z. Haiman (World Scientific, New Jersey, 2023). We welcome comments or feedback