On the orbital evolution of binaries with circumbinary discs
Ryan Heath, Chris Nixon

TL;DR
This paper investigates the orbital evolution of binaries with circumbinary discs, showing that realistic thin discs tend to cause binary shrinkage, while thick discs can lead to expansion, clarifying conflicting simulation results.
Contribution
The study clarifies why previous simulations showed binary expansion by demonstrating the impact of disc parameters, emphasizing the role of realistic thin discs in binary shrinkage.
Findings
Thin discs cause binary orbit to shrink due to less accretion.
Thick, high-viscosity discs can lead to binary expansion.
Tidal interactions dominate in realistic thin disc scenarios.
Abstract
Circumbinary discs are generally thought to take up angular momentum and energy from the binary orbit over time through gravitational torques mediated by orbital resonances. This process leads to the shrinkage of the binary orbit over time, and is important in a variety of astrophysical contexts including the orbital evolution of stellar binaries, the migration of planets in protoplanetary discs, and the evolution of black hole binaries (stellar and supermassive). The merger of compact object binaries provides a source of gravitational waves in the Universe. Recently, several groups have reported numerical simulations of circumbinary discs that yield the opposite result, finding that the binary expands with time. Here we argue that this result is primarily due to the choice of simulation parameters, made for numerical reasons, which differ from realistic disc parameters in many cases.…
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