1,163 research outputs found
The Formation of Black-Hole X-Ray Transients
Studies of the observed characteristics of black-hole (BH) X-ray binaries can
be provide us with valuable information about the process of BH formation. In
this paper I address some of the aspects of our current understanding of BH
formation in binaries and point out some of the existing problems of current
theoretical models. In particular, the measured orbital periods and donor-star
properties indicate that a common-envelope phase appears to be a necessary
ingredient of the evolutionary history of observed BH X-ray transients, and
that it must be associated only with a modest orbital contraction. The timing
of this common-envelope phase is crucial in determining the final BH masses and
current evolutionary models of mass-losing massive stars place strong
constraints on the possible masses for immediate BH progenitors and wind mass
loss from helium stars. Last, it is interesting that, even in the absence of
any source of mass loss, the highest helium-star masses predicted by current
evolutionary models are still not high enough to account for the measured BH
mass in V404 Cyg (>10 solar masses). An alternative for the formation of
relatively massive BH may be provided by the evolutionary sequence proposed by
Eggleton & Verbunt (1986), which invokes hierarchical triples as progenitors of
BH X-ray binaries with low-mass companions.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Evolution of Binary and Multiple
Star Systems, ASP Conf.Series, 2001, P. Podsiadlowski et al. (eds.)
(proceedings from a Meeting in Celebration of Peter Eggleton's 60th Birthday
Event Rates for Binary Inspiral
Double compact objects (neutron stars and black holes) found in binaries with
small orbital separations are known to spiral in and are expected to coalesce
eventually because of the emission of gravitational waves. Such inspiral and
merger events are thought to be primary sources for ground based
gravitational-wave interferometric detectors (such as LIGO). Here, we present a
brief review of estimates of coalescence rates and we examine the origin and
relative importance of uncertainties associated with the rate estimates. For
the case of double neutron star systems, we compare the most recent rate
estimates to upper limits derived in a number of different ways. We also
discuss the implications of the formation of close binaries with two
non-recycled pulsars.Comment: 12 pages, to appear in AIP proceedings ``Astrophysical Sources of
Gravitational Radiation for Ground-Based Detectors.'
The distribution of mass ratios in compact object binaries
Using the StarTrack population synthesis code we compute the distribution of
masses of merging compact object (black hole or neutron star) binaries. The
shape of the mass distribution is sensitive to some of the parameters governing
the stellar binary evolution. We discuss the possibility of constraining
stellar evolution models using mass measurements obtained from the detection of
compact object inspiral with the upcoming gravitational-wave observatories.Comment: 10 pages, uses spie.cls, Proc of the SPIE Conference "Astronomical
Telescopes and Instrumentation
Bounds on Expected Black Hole Spins in Inspiraling Binaries
As a first step towards understanding the angular momentum evolution history
of black holes in merging black-hole/neutron-star binaries, we perform
population synthesis calculations to track the distribution of accretion
histories of compact objects in such binaries. We find that there are three
distinct processes which can possibly contribute to the black-hole spin
magnitude: a birth spin for the black hole, imparted at either (i) the collapse
of a massive progenitor star to a black hole or (ii) the accretion-induced
collapse of a neutron star to a black hole; and (iii) an accretion spin-up when
the already formed black hole [via (i) or (ii)] goes through an accretion
episode (through an accretion disk or a common-envelope phase). Our results
show that, with regard to accretion-induced spinup in merging BH-NS binaries
[method (iii) above], only
{\em accretion episodes associated with common-envelope phases and
hypercritical accretion rates} occur in the formation history of merging black
hole/neutron star binaries. Lacking unambiguous experimental information about
BH birth spins [i.e., regarding the results of processes (i) and (ii)], we
choose two fiducial values for the BH birth angular momentum parameter a=J/M^2,
consistent with observations of (i) NS birth spins (a roughly 0) and (ii) X-ray
binaries (a=0.5). Using these two fiducial values and a conservative upper
bound on the specific angular momentum of accreted matter, we discuss the
expected range of black hole spins in the binaries of interest. We conclude
with comments on the significance of these results for ground-based
gravitational-wave searches of inspiral signals from black hole binaries.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. (v1) Uses emulateapj.cls. 5 figures. (v2):
corrected reference list and uses smaller figures (v3): Includes changes in
response to referee comments, including new discussion of XRBs. Figures
merged, so only 3 figures (v4) Minor typo correction, plus updated abstract
posted onlin
Binary Population Synthesis: Methods, Normalization, and Surprises
In this paper we present a brief overview of population synthesis methods
with a discussion of their main advantages and disadvantages. In the second
part, we present some recent results from synthesis models of close binary
compact objects with emphasis on the predicted rates, their uncertainties, and
the model input parameters the rates are most sensitive to. We also report on a
new evolutionary path leading to the formation of close double neutron stars
(NS), with the unique characteristic that none of the two NS ever had the
chance to be recycled by accretion. Their formation rates turn out to be
comparable to or maybe even higher than those of recycled NS-NS binaries (like
the ones observed), but their detection probability as binary pulsars is much
smaller because of their short lifetimes. We discuss the implications of such a
population for gravitational-wave detection of NS-NS inspiral events, and
possibly for gamma-ray bursts and their host galaxies.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings ``The influence of
binaries on stellar population studies'', Brussels, August 2000 (Kluwer
Academic Publishers), ed. D.Vanbevere
Intrinsic selection biases of ground-based gravitational wave searches for high-mass BH-BH mergers
The next generation of ground-based gravitational wave detectors may detect a
few mergers of comparable-mass M\simeq 100-1000 Msun ("intermediate-mass'', or
IMBH) spinning black holes. Black hole spin is known to have a significant
impact on the orbit, merger signal, and post-merger ringdown of any binary with
non-negligible spin. In particular, the detection volume for spinning binaries
depends significantly on the component black hole spins. We provide a fit to
the single-detector and isotropic-network detection volume versus (total) mass
and arbitrary spin for equal-mass binaries. Our analysis assumes matched
filtering to all significant available waveform power (up to l=6 available for
fitting, but only l<= 4 significant) estimated by an array of 64 numerical
simulations with component spins as large as S_{1,2}/M^2 <= 0.8. We provide a
spin-dependent estimate of our uncertainty, up to S_{1,2}/M^2 <= 1. For the
initial (advanced) LIGO detector, our fits are reliable for
(). In the online version of this
article, we also provide fits assuming incomplete information, such as the
neglect of higher-order harmonics. We briefly discuss how a strong selection
bias towards aligned spins influences the interpretation of future
gravitational wave detections of IMBH-IMBH mergers.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures, accepted by PRD. v2 is version accepted for
publication, including minor changes in response to referee feedback and
updated citation
Are Supernova Kicks Responsible for X-ray Binary Ejection from Young Clusters?
Recent Chandra observations of interacting and starburst galaxies have led us
to investigate the apparent correlation between the positions of young star
clusters and Chandra point sources. Assumed to be X-ray binaries (XRBs), these
point sources do not seem to coincide with the massive (~1e5 Msun), young (1-50
Myr) stellar clusters that can easily form systems capable of such emission. We
use a sophisticated binary evolution and population synthesis code (StarTrack)
and a simplified cluster model to track both the X-ray luminosity and position
of XRBs as a function of time. These binaries are born within the cluster
potential with self-consistent positions and velocities and we show that a
large fraction (~70%) can be ejected from the parent due to supernova
explosions and associated systemic velocities. For brighter sources and cluster
masses below ~1e6 Msun, we find that the average number of bright XRBs per
cluster remains near or below unity, consistent with current observations.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure. Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal
Letter
Short Gamma-Ray Bursts and Binary Mergers in Spiral and Elliptical Galaxies: Redshift Distribution and Hosts
To test whether the short GRB rates, redshift distribution and host galaxies
are consistent with current theoretical predictions, we use avery large
database of population synthesis calculations to examine BH-NS and NS-NS merger
rates in the universe, factoring in (i) the star formation history of the
universe, (ii) a heterogeneous population of star-forming galaxies, including
spirals and ellipticals, and (iii) a simple flux-limited selection model for
short GRB detection. When we require our models reproduce the known short GRB
rates and redshift measurements (and, for NS-NS, the merger rates extrapolated
from binary pulsars in the Galaxy), a small fraction of models reproduce all
observations, both when we assume a NS-NS and a BH-NS origin for bursts. Most
commonly models produce mergers preferentially in spiral galaxies if short GRBs
arise from NS-NS mergers alone. Model universes where present-day binary
mergers occur preferentially in elliptical galaxies necessarily include a
significant fraction of binaries with long delay times between birth and merger
(often ). Though long delays occur, almost all of our models
predict that a higher proportion of short GRBs should occur at moderate to high
redshift (e.g., ) than has presently been observed, in agreement with
recent observations which suggest a selection bias towards successful follow-up
of low-redshift short GRBs. Finally, if only a fraction of BH-NS mergers have
the right combination of masses and spins to make GRBs, then at best only a
small fraction of BH-NS models could be consistent with all {\em current}
available data. (Abridged)Comment: 14 figures, using bitmapped fonts (via eps2eps) to fit in archive
space restrictions; better resolution figures are available from the author.
Accepted for publication in ApJ. v3 updates reference
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