Formation of Ultracompact X-ray Binaries in Dense Star Clusters

Abstract

Bright, ultracompact X-ray binaries observed in dense star clusters, such as Galactic globular clusters, must have formed relatively recently, since their lifetimes as persistent bright sources are short (e.g., ~108 yr above 1036 erg/s for a 1.4 Msun neutron star accreting from a degenerate helium companion with an initial mass of ~0.2 Msun). Therefore, we can use the present conditions in a cluster core to study possible dynamical formation processes for these sources. Here we show that direct physical collisions between neutron stars and red giants can provide a sufficient formation rate to explain the observed numbers of bright sources. These collisions produce tight, eccentric neutron star -- white dwarf binaries that decay to contact by gravitational radiation on timescales ~106-1010 yr, usually shorter and often much shorter than the cluster age.

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