Interacting Binaries with Eccentric Orbits. III. Orbital Evolution due to Direct Impact and Self-Accretion
J. F. Sepinsky, B. Willems, V. Kalogera, F. A. Rasio

TL;DR
This paper investigates how direct impact and self-accretion during mass transfer in eccentric binary stars influence their orbital evolution, challenging common assumptions about rapid circularization and angular momentum loss.
Contribution
It introduces a three-body integration method to model mass transfer outcomes and their effects on orbital elements, providing new insights into eccentric binary evolution.
Findings
Direct impact can both increase or decrease orbital semi-major axis and eccentricity.
Self-accretion always reduces orbital size and eccentricity.
Mass transfer can lead to subsynchronous rotation of the donor star.
Abstract
The rapid circularization and synchronization of the stellar components in an eccentric binary system at the onset of Roche lobe overflow (RLO) is a fundamental assumption common to all binary stellar evolution and population synthesis codes, even though the validity of this assumption is questionable both theoretically and observationally. Here we calculate the evolution of the orbital elements of an eccentric binary through the direct three-body integration of a massive particle ejected through the inner Lagrangian point of the donor star at periastron. The trajectory of this particle leads to three possible outcomes: direct accretion (DA) onto the companion star within a single orbit, self-accretion (SA) back onto the donor star within a single orbit, or a quasi-periodic orbit around the companion star. We calculate the secular evolution of the binary orbit in the first two cases and…
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