The origin of the first neutron star -- neutron star merger
K. Belczynski, A. Askar, M. Arca-Sedda, M. Chruslinska, M. Donnari, M., Giersz, M. Benacquista, R. Spurzem, D. Jin, G. Wiktorowicz, D. Belloni

TL;DR
This paper investigates the formation mechanisms of the first observed neutron star merger, GW170817, in an old galaxy, by modeling three leading formation channels and comparing predicted rates with observations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive simulation-based analysis of classical, dynamical, and nuclear cluster formation channels for neutron star mergers in old galaxies, highlighting discrepancies with observed rates.
Findings
Predicted merger rates are lower than observed by LIGO/Virgo.
Current models may be incomplete or missing an efficient formation channel.
Detection could be a statistical coincidence or require new physics or channels.
Abstract
The first neutron star-neutron star (NS-NS) merger was discovered on August 17, 2017 through gravitational waves (GW170817) and followed with electromagnetic observations. This merger was detected in an old elliptical galaxy with no recent star formation. We perform a suite of numerical calculations to understand the formation mechanism of this merger. We probe three leading formation mechanisms of double compact objects: classical isolated binary star evolution, dynamical evolution in globular clusters and nuclear cluster formation to test whether they are likely to produce NS-NS mergers in old host galaxies. Our simulations with optimistic assumptions show current NS-NS merger rates at the level of 10^-2 yr^-1 from binary stars, 5 x 10^-5 yr^-1 from globular clusters and 10^-5 yr^-1 from nuclear clusters for all local elliptical galaxies (within 100 Mpc^3). These models are thus in…
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