High mass X-ray binaries as progenitors of gravitational wave sources (1812.00012v1)
Abstract: X-ray binaries with black hole (BH) accretors and massive star donors at short orbital periods of a few days can evolve into close binary BH systems (BBH) that merge within the Hubble time through stable mass transfer evolution. From observational point of view, upon the Roche-lobe overflow, such systems will most likely appear as ultra-luminous X-ray sources (ULXs). To study this connection, we compute the mass transfer phase in systems with BH accretors and massive star donors ($M > 15 \,M_\odot$) at various orbital separations and metallicities using the MESA stellar evolution code. In the case of core-hydrogen and core-helium burning donors (cases A and C of mass transfer) we find the typical duration of super-Eddington mass transfer of up to $106$ and $105 \, \rm yr$ , with rates of $10{-6}$ and $10{-5} \,M_\odot \, \rm yr{-1}$ , respectively. Given that roughly $0.5$ ULXs are found per unit of star formation rate ($\,M_\odot \, \rm yr{-1}$), and assuming that $10\%$ of all the observed ULXs form merging BBH, we estimate the rate of BBH mergers from stable mass transfer evolution to be at most $10 {\rm ~Gpc}{-3} {\rm ~yr}{-1}$.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.