Double Compact Objects I: The Significance Of The Common Envelope On Merger Rates
Michal Dominik, Krzysztof Belczynski, Christopher Fryer, Daniel Holz,, Emanuele Berti, Tomasz Bulik, Ilya Mandel, Richard O'Shaughnessy

TL;DR
This paper models the impact of the common envelope phase on the merger rates of double compact objects, incorporating updated stellar physics and supernova models to improve predictions relevant for gravitational wave observations.
Contribution
It introduces a realistic treatment of the common envelope phase and updated stellar wind and supernova models, significantly refining merger rate predictions.
Findings
Envelope binding energy critically affects merger timescales.
Natal kicks influence black hole binary formation.
Low metallicity increases black hole masses.
Abstract
The last decade of observational and theoretical developments in stellar and binary evolution provides an opportunity to incorporate major improvements to the predictions from populations synthesis models. We compute the Galactic merger rates for NS-NS, BH-NS, and BH-BH mergers with the StarTrack code. The most important revisions include: updated wind mass loss rates (allowing for stellar mass black holes up to ), a realistic treatment of the common envelope phase (a process that can affect merger rates by 2--3 orders of magnitude), and a qualitatively new neutron star/black hole mass distribution (consistent with the observed "mass gap"). Our findings include: (i) The binding energy of the envelope plays a pivotal role in determining whether a binary merges within a Hubble time. (ii) Our description of natal kicks from supernovae plays an important role, especially for the…
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