Common Envelope Evolution: Where we stand and how we can move forward
N. Ivanova, S. Justham, X. Chen, O. De Marco, C.L. Fryer, E. Gaburov,, H.Ge, E.Glebbeek, Z.Han, X.-D.Li, G.Lu, T.Marsh, Ph. Podsiadlowski, A., Potter, N. Soker, R. Taam, T.M. Tauris, E.P.J. van den Heuvel, R. F., Webbink

TL;DR
This paper reviews the current understanding of common-envelope evolution (CEE), emphasizing physics-based debates, comparing simulation techniques, and exploring observational links to improve theoretical models of this complex binary star process.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive physics-focused review of CEE, compares hydrodynamic simulations, and discusses new approaches to connect models with observations.
Findings
Hydrodynamic simulations show varying outcomes based on initial conditions.
Energy sources and sinks in CEE are complex and not fully understood.
Recent observations like V1309 Sco offer new insights into CEE processes.
Abstract
This work aims to present our current best physical understanding of common-envelope evolution (CEE). We highlight areas of consensus and disagreement, and stress ideas which should point the way forward for progress in this important but long-standing and largely unconquered problem. Unusually for CEE-related work, we mostly try to avoid relying on results from population synthesis or observations, in order to avoid potentially being misled by previous misunderstandings. As far as possible we debate all the relevant issues starting from physics alone, all the way from the evolution of the binary system immediately before CEE begins to the processes which might occur just after the ejection of the envelope. In particular, we include extensive discussion about the energy sources and sinks operating in CEE, and hence examine the foundations of the standard energy formalism. Special…
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