Orbital Eccentricity and Spin-Orbit Misalignment Are Evidence that Neutron Star-Black Hole Mergers Form through Triple Star Evolution
Jakob Stegmann, Jakub Klencki

TL;DR
This paper proposes that the observed eccentricity and spin-orbit misalignment in neutron star-black hole mergers are best explained by their formation through triple star evolution, highlighting the importance of three-body dynamics.
Contribution
It demonstrates that triple star evolution naturally accounts for the properties of NSBH mergers, challenging previous formation scenarios and emphasizing the role of tertiary companions.
Findings
NSBH merger rate estimated at 1-23 Gpc^{-3} yr^{-1}
Over 10% of mergers may have residual eccentricity > 0.1
Most mergers retain eccentricities > 10^{-3}, detectable by future detectors
Abstract
There is growing evidence that a substantial fraction of the neutron star-black holes (NSBHs) detected through gravitational waves merge with non-zero eccentricity or large BH spin-orbit misalignment. This is in tension with the leading formation scenarios to date. Residual eccentricity rules out formation through isolated binary star evolution, while NS natal kicks and the unequal masses of NSBHs inhibit efficient pairing in dense stellar environments. Here, we report that all observed properties-NSBH merger rate, eccentricity, and spin-orbit misalignment-are explained by the high prevalence of massive stellar triples in the field. Modelling their evolution from the ZAMS, we investigate NSBH mergers caused by gravitational perturbations from a tertiary companion. We show that the formation of the NS decisively impacts the triple stability, preferentially leaving behind surviving NSBHs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
