Exploring the borderline between stable mass transfer and mergers in close binary evolution
Christoph Sch\"urmann, Norbert Langer

TL;DR
This study models mass transfer in close binary stars to determine conditions leading to stability or mergers, revealing that transfer efficiency strongly influences outcomes and providing new analytical tools for predicting binary evolution.
Contribution
The paper introduces detailed models of accreting stars, derives analytical fits for radius evolution, and establishes a new prescription for the stability boundary in binary mass transfer.
Findings
Models with rapid accretion expand significantly, but less so in intermediate masses.
Super-Eddington accretion causes dynamic expansion of accreting stars.
Mass transfer efficiency below 50% likely explains Wolf-Rayet star formation in the SMC.
Abstract
The majority of massive stars reside in binary systems, which are expected to experience mass transfer during their evolution. However, so far the conditions under which mass transfer leads to a common envelope, and thus possibly to a merging of both stars, are not well understood. Main uncertainties arise from the possible swelling of the mass gainer, and from angular momentum loss from the binary system, during non-conservative mass transfer. We have computed a dense grid of detailed models of stars accreting mass at constant rates, to determine their radius increase due to their thermal disequilibrium. While we find that models with faster than thermal timescale accretion generally expand, this expansion remains quite limited in the intermediate mass regime even for accretion rates which exceed the thermal timescale accretion rate by a factor of 100. Our models of massive accretion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Exploration and Technology · High-pressure geophysics and materials
