The Impact of Angular Momentum Loss on the Outcomes of Binary Mass Transfer

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL(2023)

Cited 0|Views17
No score
Abstract
We use the rapid binary population synthesis code COMPAS to investigate commonly used prescriptions for the determination of mass transfer stability in close binaries and the orbital separations after stable mass transfer. The degree of orbital tightening during nonconservative mass transfer episodes is governed by the poorly constrained angular momentum carried away by the ejected material. Increased orbital tightening drives systems toward unstable mass transfer leading to a common envelope. We find that the fraction of interacting binaries that will undergo only stable mass transfer throughout their lives fluctuates between a few and similar to 20% due to uncertainty in the angular momentum loss alone. If mass transfer is significantly nonconservative, stability prescriptions that rely on the assumption of conservative mass transfer underpredict the number of systems which experience unstable mass transfer and stellar mergers. This may substantially impact predictions about the rates of various transients, including luminous red novae, stripped-envelope supernovae, X-ray binaries, and the progenitors of coalescing compact binaries.
More
Translated text
Key words
mass transfer,angular momentum loss,binary mass,angular momentum
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined