The boring history of Gaia BH3 from isolated binary evolution
Giuliano Iorio, Stefano Torniamenti, Michela Mapelli, Marco, Dall'Amico, Alessandro A. Trani, Sara Rastello, Cecilia Sgalletta, Stefano, Rinaldi, Guglielmo Costa, Bera A. Dhal-Lahtinen, Gaston J. Escobar, Erika, Korb, M. Paola Vaccaro, Elena Lacchin, Benedetta Mestichelli

TL;DR
This study investigates the isolated binary evolution pathway for Gaia BH3, a massive dormant black hole, revealing its likely formation from wide, low-metallicity binaries with low natal kicks, and estimating its rarity in the Milky Way halo.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed population synthesis analysis of Gaia BH3 formation via isolated binary evolution, highlighting the conditions and probabilities for such systems.
Findings
Gaia BH3 likely formed from wide, low-metallicity binaries with low natal kicks.
Estimated up to 4000 similar systems in the Galactic halo, with about 100 compatible with Gaia BH3.
Formation efficiency is approximately 4×10⁻⁸ per solar mass in old, metal-poor populations.
Abstract
Gaia BH3 is the first observed dormant black hole (BH) with a mass of M and represents the first confirmation that such massive BHs are associated with metal-poor stars. Here, we explore the isolated binary formation channel for Gaia BH3 focusing on the old and metal-poor stellar population of the Milky Way halo. We use the MIST stellar models and our open-source population synthesis code SEVN to evolve binaries exploring 20 sets of parameters. We find that systems like Gaia BH3 form preferentially from binaries initially composed of a massive star ( M) and a low mass companion ( M) in a wide ( days) and eccentric orbit (). Such progenitor binary stars do not undergo any Roche-lobe overflow episode during their entire evolution, so that the final orbital properties of the BH-star system are determined at…
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