The impact of natal kicks on black hole binaries
Alejandro Vigna-G\'omez

TL;DR
This paper investigates how natal kicks during stellar collapse influence the formation and merger times of binary black holes, revealing regimes where kicks significantly alter merger times and implications for observing black hole formation scenarios.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the effects of neutrino-induced natal kicks on binary black hole evolution and merger times, highlighting regimes with significant impact and observational implications.
Findings
Moderate kicks can reduce merger times by over an order of magnitude.
Large kicks often unbind binaries but can produce retrograde orbits.
High kicks are inconsistent with complete collapse scenarios.
Abstract
In massive binary-star systems, supernova explosions can significantly alter the orbit during the formation of compact objects. Some compact objects are predicted to form via direct collapse, a scenario with negligible mass loss and no baryonic ejecta emitted. In this scenario, most of the energy is released via neutrinos, and any resulting natal kick arises from asymmetries in their emission. Here I investigate stellar collapse leading to binary black hole (BH) formation, with a focus on how the natal kick influences the gravitational-wave-driven merger time. Broadly, I find three regimes. For low natal kicks, the effect on the time-to-coalescence is negligible. For moderate natal kicks, if the binary remains bound, up to 50% of binary BHs experience a decrease in their time-to-coalescence by more than an order of magnitude. For large natal kicks, although most binaries become unbound,…
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