Constraints on compact binary merger evolution from spin-orbit misalignment in gravitational-wave observations
B. P. Gompertz, M. Nicholl, P. Schmidt, G. Pratten, A. Vecchio

TL;DR
This paper investigates the spin-orbit misalignment in neutron star-black hole mergers using gravitational-wave data, revealing implications for their formation channels and the potential impact on electromagnetic counterparts.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the tilt angle distributions of NS-BH mergers and discusses their implications for binary evolution models and formation scenarios.
Findings
Tilt angles peak at anti-aligned orientations.
Early NS-BH mergers are less massive than classical models predict.
Future detections may show consistent mass ratios and total masses.
Abstract
The identification of the first confirmed neutron star - black hole (NS-BH) binary mergers by the LIGO, Virgo and KAGRA collaboration provides the opportunity to investigate the properties of the early sample of confirmed and candidate events. Here, we focus primarily on the tilt angle of the black hole's spin relative to the orbital angular momentum vector of the binary, and the implications for the physical processes that determine this tilt. The posterior tilt distributions of GW200115 and the candidate events GW190426_152155 and GW190917_114630 peak at significantly anti-aligned orientations (though display wide distributions). Producing these tilts through isolated binary evolution would require stronger natal kicks than are typically considered (and preferentially-polar kicks would be ruled out), and/or an additional source of tilt such as stable mass transfer. The early sample of…
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