Black hole mergers and blue stragglers from hierarchical triples formed in globular clusters
Fabio Antonini, Sourav Chatterjee, Carl L. Rodriguez, Meagan Morscher,, Bharath Pattabiraman, Vicky Kalogera, Frederic A. Rasio

TL;DR
This study investigates how hierarchical triple-star systems formed in globular clusters can lead to gravitational wave sources and blue straggler stars through Lidov-Kozai cycles, using Monte Carlo models and three-body simulations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed modeling of dynamical triple formation and evolution, highlighting their role in producing detectable gravitational wave events and blue stragglers.
Findings
Estimated 1 per year detection rate for black hole mergers by aLIGO.
20% of black hole mergers may have residual eccentricity at detection.
Lidov-Kozai mechanism accounts for up to 10% of blue stragglers in clusters.
Abstract
Hierarchical triple-star systems are expected to form frequently via close binary-binary encounters in the dense cores of globular clusters. In a sufficiently inclined triple, gravitational interactions between the inner and outer binary can cause large-amplitude oscillations in the eccentricity of the inner orbit ("Lidov-Kozai cycles"), which can lead to a collision and merger of the two inner components. In this paper we use Monte Carlo models of dense star clusters to identify all triple systems formed dynamically and we compute their evolution using a highly accurate three-body integrator which incorporates relativistic and tidal effects. We find that a large fraction of these triples evolve through a non-secular dynamical phase which can drive the inner binary to higher eccentricities than predicted by the standard secular perturbation theory (even including octupole-order terms).…
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