Abstract

In their third observing run, the LIGO–Virgo–KAGRA gravitational-wave (GW) observatory was sensitive to binary black hole (BBH) mergers out to redshifts z merge ≈ 1. Because GWs are inefficient at shrinking the binary orbit, some of these BBH systems likely experienced long delay times τ between the formation of their progenitor stars at z form and their GW merger at z merge. In fact, the distribution of delay times predicted by isolated binary evolution resembles a power law with slope −1 ≲ α τ ≲ −0.35 and a minimum delay time of . We use these predicted delay time distributions to infer the formation redshifts of the ∼70 BBH events reported in the third GW transient catalog GWTC-3 and the formation rate of BBH progenitors. For our default α τ = –1 delay time distribution, we find that GWTC-3 contains at least one system (with 90% credibility) that formed earlier than z form > 4.4. Comparing our inferred BBH progenitor formation rate to the star formation rate, we find that at z form = 4, the number of BBH progenitor systems formed per stellar mass was and this yield dropped to by z form = 0. We discuss implications of this measurement for the cosmic metallicity evolution, finding that for typical assumptions about the metallicity dependence of the BBH yield, the average metallicity at z form = 4 was , although the inferred metallicity can vary by a factor of ≈3 for different assumptions about the BBH yield. Our results highlight the promise of current GW observatories to probe high-redshift star formation.

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