The impact of mass-transfer physics on the observable properties of field binary black hole populations
Simone S. Bavera, Tassos Fragos, Michael Zevin, Christopher P. L., Berry, Pablo Marchant, Jeff J. Andrews, Scott Coughlin, Aaron Dotter,, Konstantinos Kovlakas, Devina Misra, Juan G. Serra-Perez, Ying Qin, Kyle A., Rocha, Jaime Rom\'an-Garza, Nam H. Tran, Emmanouil Zapartas

TL;DR
This study examines how different mass-transfer physics affect the observable properties and formation rates of binary black hole populations, highlighting the significance of common-envelope efficiency and accretion limits.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the impact of mass-transfer physics on black hole binary properties and constrains formation channel contributions using gravitational wave data.
Findings
Low common envelope efficiency leads to tighter orbits and more tidally spun-up black holes.
Only the common envelope channel can produce systems with non-zero effective spins detectable today.
The local rate density for the common envelope channel is estimated between 17-113 Gpc^{-3} yr^{-1}.
Abstract
We study the impact of mass-transfer physics on the observable properties of binary black hole populations formed through isolated binary evolution. We investigate the impact of mass-accretion efficiency onto compact objects and common-envelope efficiency on the observed distributions of , and . We find that low common envelope efficiency translates to tighter orbits post common envelope and therefore more tidally spun up second-born black holes. However, these systems have short merger timescales and are only marginally detectable by current gravitational-waves detectors as they form and merge at high redshifts (), outside current detector horizons. Assuming Eddington-limited accretion efficiency and that the first-born black hole is formed with a negligible spin, we find that all non-zero systems in the detectable population can come…
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