Gravitational waves from in-spirals of compact objects in binary common-envelope evolution
Abstract
Detection of gravitational-wave (GW) sources enables the characterisation of binary compact objects and of their in-spiral. However, other dissipative processes can affect the in-spiral. Here we show that the in-spiral of compact objects through a gaseous common-envelope (CE) arising from an evolved stellar companion produces a novel type of GW-sources, whose evolution is dominated by the dissipative gas dynamical friction effects from the CE, rather than the GW-emission itself. The evolution and properties of the GW-signals differ from those of isolated gas-poor mergers significantly. We find characteristic strains of 10-23-10-21 (10 kpc/D) for such sources -- observable by next-generation space-based GW-detectors. The evolution of the GW-signal can serve as a probe of the interior regions of the evolved star, and the final stages of CE-evolution, otherwise inaccessible through other observational means. Moreover, such CE-mergers are frequently followed by observable explosive electromagnetic counterparts and/or the formation of exotic stars.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.