An upper limit on the frequency of short-period black hole companions to Sun-like stars

Matthew J. Green*, Yoav Ziv, Hans Walter Rix, Dan Maoz, Ikram Hamoudy, Tsevi Mazeh, Simchon Faigler, Marco C. Lam, Kareem El-Badry, George Hume, James Munday, Paige Yarker

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Stellar-mass black holes descend from high-mass stars, most of which had stellar binary companions. However, the number of those binary systems that survive the binary evolution and black hole formation is uncertain by multiple orders of magnitude. The survival rate is particularly uncertain for massive stars with low-mass companions, which are thought to be the progenitors of most black hole X-ray binaries. We present a search for close black hole companions (orbital period .3 days, equivalent to separation .20 R ) to AFGK-type stars in TESS; that is, the non-accreting counterparts to and progenitors of low-mass X-ray binaries. Such black holes can be detected by the tidally induced ellipsoidal deformation of the visible star, and the ensuing photometric light curve variations. From an initial sample of 4.7 × 106 TESS stars, we have selected 457 candidate ellipsoidal variables with large mass ratios. However, after spectroscopic follow-up of 250 of them, none so far are consistent with a close black hole companion. On the basis of this non-detection, we determine (with 2σ confidence) that fewer than one in 105 solar-type stars in the solar neighbourhood hosts a short-period black hole companion. This upper limit is in tension with a number of ‘optimistic’ population models in the literature that predict short-period black hole companions around one in ∼104−5 stars.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberA210
JournalAstronomy and Astrophysics
Volume695
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Mar 2025

Funding

FundersFunder number
European Space Agency
Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias
European Southern Observatory
Science Mission Directorate
Southern Hemisphere
Gaia Data Processing and Analysis Consortium
Diabetes Patient Advocacy Coalition2013, 2023, 2020
European Union’s FP7 Programme833031
European Research Council101054731

    Keywords

    • binaries: close
    • stars: black holes
    • stars: solar-type

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