Observational properties of massive black hole binary progenitors
R. Hainich, L. M. Oskinova, T. Shenar, P. Marchant, J. J. Eldridge, A., A. C. Sander, W.-R. Hamann, N. Langer, and H. Todt

TL;DR
This paper models the spectral properties of massive binary black hole progenitors during their evolutionary stages to aid observational identification and refine merger rate predictions.
Contribution
It provides synthetic spectra and observational feedback parameters for massive BH progenitors, linking stellar evolution models with observable features.
Findings
Progenitors start as O2-3V stars evolving into blue supergiants.
Systems appear as wind-fed high-mass X-ray binaries after primary collapse.
Empirical mass-loss rates suggest higher metallicity merger candidates.
Abstract
The first directly detected gravitational waves (GW 150914) were emitted by two coalescing black holes (BHs) with masses of ~36Msun and ~29Msun. Several scenarios have been proposed to put this detection into an astrophysical context. The evolution of an isolated massive binary system is among commonly considered models. Various groups have performed detailed binary-evolution calculations that lead to BH merger events. However, the question remains open as to whether binary systems with the predicted properties really exist. The aim of this paper is to help observers to close this gap by providing spectral characteristics of massive binary BH progenitors during a phase where at least one of the companions is still non-degenerate. Stellar evolution models predict fundamental stellar parameters. Using these as input for our stellar atmosphere code (PoWR), we compute a set of models for…
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