Massquerade: Impacts of Mass Ratio Reversals on Binary Black Hole Merger Rates and Mass Distributions
Tyler B. Smith, Floor Broekgaarden, Sasha Levina, Amedeo Romagnolo, Manasvini Komandur, Melanie Santiago, Kyle A. Rocha

TL;DR
This study explores how mass ratio reversal in binary stars influences black hole merger rates and mass distributions, revealing model-dependent effects and identifying key evolutionary pathways affecting observable gravitational-wave signals.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of mass ratio reversal's impact on black hole mergers, highlighting its significance in interpreting gravitational-wave data and binary evolution models.
Findings
MRR systems dominate high-mass merger rate regions in COMPAS
Three evolutionary pathways lead to MRR systems: core-growth, PPISN-shrinking, asymmetric-CCSN
Most MRR systems originate from low-metallicity, massive progenitors
Abstract
We investigate the role of mass ratio reversal (MRR), in which the initially less massive star in a binary forms the more massive compact object, in shaping the astrophysical binary black hole (BBH) merger rate and mass distribution inferred by LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA, comparing simulation outcomes from population synthesis frameworks COMPAS and SEVN. We find that the observational imprint of MRR differs qualitatively between the two models. In COMPAS, MRR systems dominate the merger rate density at high primary masses ( 12 M), high secondary masses ( 20 M), and high mass ratios (), whereas in SEVN, MRR systems remain subdominant across the BBH mass distribution. This implies that the initially less massive star can massquerade as the observed primary black hole, such that the primary-mass distribution is not a direct tracer of the initially more…
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