Binaries that merge within the local Universe originate from progenitor
systems that formed at different times and in various environments. The
efficiency of formation of double compact objects is highly sensitive to
metallicity of the star formation. Therefore, to confront the theoretical
predictions with observational limits resulting from gravitational waves
observations one has to account for the formation and evolution of progenitor
stars in the chemically evolving Universe. In particular, this requires
knowledge of the distribution of cosmic star formation rate at different
metallicities and times, probed by redshift (SFR(Z,z)). We investigate the
effect of the assumed SFR(Z,z) on the properties of merging double compact
objects, in particular on their merger rate densities. Using a set of binary
evolution models from Chruslinska et al. (2018) we demonstrate that the
reported tension between the merger rates of different types of double compact
objects and current observational limits in some cases can be resolved if a
SFR(Z,z) closer to that expected based on observations of local star-forming
galaxies is used, without the need for changing the assumptions about the
evolution of progenitor stars of different masses. This highlights the
importance of finding tighter constraints on SFR(Z,z) and understanding the
associated uncertainties.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, resubmitted to MNRAS after minor revisio