Modelling stellar evolution in mass-transferring binaries and gravitational-wave progenitors with METISSE
Poojan Agrawal, Jarrod Hurley, Simon Stevenson, Carl L. Rodriguez,, Dorottya Szecsi, Alex Kemp

TL;DR
This paper enhances the METISSE stellar evolution code to include mass transfer effects, enabling improved modeling of massive binary systems and their potential to produce gravitational-wave sources.
Contribution
The authors upgraded METISSE to incorporate mass transfer effects, allowing more accurate binary evolution simulations and predictions for gravitational-wave progenitors.
Findings
Mass transfer effects significantly influence binary evolution outcomes.
Stellar model inputs critically affect the formation of compact binary mergers.
Updated models can predict a range of remnant masses and orbital periods.
Abstract
Massive binaries are vital sources of various transient processes, including gravitational-wave mergers. However, large uncertainties in the evolution of massive stars, both physical and numerical, present a major challenge to the understanding of their binary evolution. In this paper, we upgrade our interpolation-based stellar evolution code METISSE to include the effects of mass changes, such as binary mass transfer or wind-driven mass loss, not already included within the input stellar tracks. METISSE's implementation of mass loss (applied to tracks without mass loss) shows excellent agreement with the SSE fitting formulae and with detailed MESA tracks, except in cases where the mass transfer is too rapid for the star to maintain equilibrium. We use this updated version of METISSE within the binary population synthesis code BSE to demonstrate the impact of varying stellar evolution…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
