Progenitors of gravitational wave mergers: Binary evolution with the stellar grid-based code ComBinE
Matthias U. Kruckow, Thomas M. Tauris, Norbert Langer, Michael Kramer,, Robert G. Izzard

TL;DR
This paper uses a new binary population synthesis code, ComBinE, to model the evolution of binary stars and explain observed gravitational wave merger events, providing insights into their origins, rates, and properties.
Contribution
The study introduces ComBinE, a grid-based binary evolution code that accurately reproduces observed gravitational wave merger events and estimates merger rates across different metallicities.
Findings
All observed GW merger events are explained by the models.
Estimated double neutron star merger rate is about 3.0 per million years in Milky-Way-like galaxies.
Upper limit for local universe double neutron star merger-rate density is 400 per year per Gpc^3.
Abstract
The first gravitational wave detections of mergers between black holes and neutron stars represent a remarkable new regime of high-energy transient astrophysics. The signals observed with LIGO-Virgo detectors come from mergers of extreme physical objects which are the end products of stellar evolution in close binary systems. To better understand their origin and merger rates, we have performed binary population syntheses at different metallicities using the new grid-based binary population synthesis code ComBinE. Starting from newborn pairs of stars, we follow their evolution including mass loss, mass transfer and accretion, common envelopes and supernova explosions. We apply the binding energies of common envelopes based on dense grids of detailed stellar structure models, make use of improved investigations of the subsequent Case BB Roche-lobe overflow and scale supernova kicks…
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