Signatures of spin precession and nutation in isolated black-hole binaries
Nathan Steinle, Michael Kesden

TL;DR
This paper investigates the spin precession and nutation in isolated binary black holes, revealing how various stellar evolution mechanisms influence gravitational-wave signatures and potentially indicating their formation history.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of spin precession and nutation parameters in BBHs, linking these features to specific stellar evolution processes and natal kick effects.
Findings
Strong natal kicks enable precession if at least one black hole spins.
Nutation depends on spin-up mechanisms like tides, accretion, or inheritance.
High natal spins and accretion can produce large precession and nutation signals.
Abstract
The spin precession of binary black holes (BBHs) that originate from isolated high-mass binary stars is determined by the interplay of phenomena such as tides, winds, accretion, common-envelope evolution, natal kicks, and stellar core-envelope coupling. In previous work, we identified regions of the parameter space that may produce BBHs with large misalignments from natal kicks and high spin magnitudes from three mechanisms - tides, accretion, or inheritance via minimal core-envelope coupling. Here, we explore the spin precession of such BBHs using five parameters that describe the amplitude and frequency with which the orbital angular momentum precesses and nutates about the total angular momentum, modulating the gravitational-wave emission. Precession is generally possible for sufficiently strong natal kicks provided at least one of the black holes is spinning. Nutation is a…
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