Fallback supernova assembly of heavy binary neutron stars and light black hole-neutron star pairs and the common stellar ancestry of GW190425 and GW200115
Alejandro Vigna-G\'omez, Sophie L. Schr{\o}der, Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz,, David R. Aguilera-Dena, Aldo Batta, Norbert Langer, and Reinhold Willcox

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new formation channel for heavy binary neutron stars and light black hole-neutron star pairs involving fallback accretion after supernova explosions of massive helium stars, explaining recent gravitational wave observations.
Contribution
It introduces three-dimensional supernova simulations showing fallback accretion can produce heavy neutron stars and light black hole-neutron star systems, aligning with observed gravitational wave events.
Findings
Fallback leads to significant neutron star mass growth.
The formation channel explains GW190425 and GW200115.
Predicts long spin-period pulsar binaries in the Galaxy.
Abstract
The detection of the unusually heavy binary neutron star merger GW190425 marked a stark contrast to the mass distribution from known Galactic pulsars in double neutron star binaries and gravitational-wave source GW170817. We suggest here a formation channel for heavy binary neutron stars and light black hole - neutron star binaries in which massive helium stars, which had their hydrogen envelope removed during a common envelope phase, remain compact and avoid mass transfer onto the neutron star companion, possibly avoiding pulsar recycling. We present three-dimensional simulations of the supernova explosion of the massive stripped helium star and follow the mass fallback evolution and the subsequent accretion onto the neutron star companion. We find that fallback leads to significant mass growth in the newly formed neutron star. This can explain the formation of heavy binary neutron…
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