Impact of Massive Binary Star and Cosmic Evolution on Gravitational Wave Observations I: Black Hole-Neutron Star Mergers
Floor S. Broekgaarden, Edo Berger, Coenraad J. Neijssel, Alejandro, Vigna-G\'omez, Debatri Chattopadhyay, Simon Stevenson, Martyna Chruslinska,, Stephen Justham, Selma E. de Mink, Ilya Mandel

TL;DR
This study models black hole-neutron star mergers to estimate their rates and properties, considering uncertainties in stellar evolution and star formation, and predicts detection rates for current GW observatories.
Contribution
It provides comprehensive merger rate predictions and property distributions for BHNS systems across 420 models, accounting for key astrophysical uncertainties.
Findings
Predicted local BHNS merger rates range from 4 to 830 Gpc^{-3} yr^{-1}.
Detection rates for GW observatories could be between 1 and 180 per year.
Most BHNS mergers involve neutron stars with masses over 2 solar masses.
Abstract
Mergers of black hole-neutron star (BHNS) binaries have now been observed by GW detectors with the recent announcement of GW200105 and GW200115. Such observations not only provide confirmation that these systems exist, but will also give unique insights into the death of massive stars, the evolution of binary systems and their possible association with gamma-ray bursts, -process enrichment and kilonovae. Here we perform binary population synthesis of isolated BHNS systems in order to present their merger rate and characteristics for ground-based GW observatories. We present the results for 420 different model permutations that explore key uncertainties in our assumptions about massive binary star evolution (e.g. mass transfer, common-envelope evolution, supernovae), and the metallicity-specific star formation rate density, and characterize their relative impacts on our predictions.…
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