Evolution of massive stellar triples and implications for compact object binary formation
Jakob Stegmann, Fabio Antonini, Maxwell Moe

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new triple stellar evolution code, TSE, to simulate massive stellar triples and explores how tertiary companions influence the formation of compact object binaries, especially black hole binaries.
Contribution
The paper presents TSE, a novel simulation code that accounts for stellar physics and gravitational interactions, revealing the significant impact of tertiary companions on binary evolution and compact object formation.
Findings
Tertiary companions can induce high eccentricities, leading to Roche lobe overflow or stellar mergers.
Approximately 5% of systems have the tertiary fill its Roche lobe; about 10% become dynamically unstable.
Between 0.3% and 5% of systems form stable inner compact object binaries, mostly black hole binaries.
Abstract
Most back hole and neutron star progenitors are found in triples or higher multiplicity systems. Here, we present a new triple stellar evolution code, , which simultaneously takes into account the physics of the stars and their gravitational interaction. is used to simulate the evolution of massive stellar triples in the galactic field from the zero-age-main-sequence until they form compact objects. To this end, we implement initial conditions that incorporate the observed high correlation between the orbital parameters of early-type stars. We show that the interaction with a tertiary companion can significantly impact the evolution of the inner binary. High eccentricities can be induced by the third-body dynamical effects, leading to a Roche lobe overflow or even to a stellar merger from initial binary separations - . In of…
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