Hunting for Dwarf Galaxies Hosting the Formation and Coalescence of Compact Binaries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Numerical Method
2.1. Galaxy Formation with GAMESH
2.1.1. DM Halos
2.1.2. Galaxies with Stars and Metals
2.1.3. Radiative Feedback on Star Formation
2.2. Stellar Binaries
- a Kroupa Initial Mass Function (IMF, Kroupa [79]) regulates the distribution of the primary stellar mass, , in a suitable mass range, while the secondary star has a mass generated according to a flat distribution for the mass ratio with ;
- the initial semi-major axis (a) has a flat distribution in log(a) (see Portegies Zwart and Verbunt [8]), ranging from (Roche lobe contact) up to ;
- the eccentricity e of the binary is sampled from a thermal distribution in the interval [80].
2.3. Formation and Coalescence Sites
- GAMESH correlates the temporal evolution of binary systems living in galaxies with the large scale process of structure formation, down to .
- Our approach is particularly effective for small dwarf galaxies, because of the many feedback processes accounted for, which strongly impact the evolution of small objects.
- The algorithm described above is sufficiently general to follow both the gravitational and the electromagnetic emission from all the sampled binaries systems, not necessarily the ones evolving into BHBH, BHNS and NSNS compact binaries. Their electromagnetic emission during the stellar evolution phases, in particular, can be additionally modeled with great details thanks to the rich set of information provided by the BPS on stellar radii, surface temperature, evolutionary status, and efficiency of mass transfer exchange. For example, by adopting SeBa, it is possible to track all the stellar stages during the binary evolution: from their proto-stellar phase to their X-rays pulsar or radio pulsar phases, if the components evolve into a neutron stars. This information is also provided as function of time for each system so that the radiative properties of the binary population can be modeled consistently with the galaxy formation process. In this way also the sources accounted for in the radiative scenario are significantly improved.
- As star forming galaxies are populated by the statistical principle of random sampling, the method requires convergence tests. An example of this validation procedure is provided in Marassi et al. [50], Appendixes B and C.
3. Results and Model Predictions
3.1. Evolution of Birth and Coalescence Hosts
3.2. Evolution of Stellar Binaries
4. Conclusions
- GAMESH includes a rich set of feedback processes capable to constraint the high redshift evolution of small dwarf galaxies, fragile to mechanical, chemical and radiative feedback;
- thanks to the data-constrained nature of our model, GAMESH is capable to match a large set of properties of the central MW-like galaxy and naturally reproduces the scaling relations observed in the local redshift universe;
- by coupling the galaxy evolution with a large database of binary systems evolving in compact objects, GAMESH predicts the galaxy hosts in which coalescence events occurs;
- by focusing on the binaries generating GW150914-like signals in dwarfs galaxies, we have shown that complex cosmic histories can connect birth and coalescence hosts. While the masses of the BHBH binaries depend on the gas metallicity of the birth dwarfs and the dynamical evolution of the stellar progenitors, the coalescence time selects the coalescence hosts and mainly depends on the initial value of the BHBH semi-major axes.
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Graziani, L. Hunting for Dwarf Galaxies Hosting the Formation and Coalescence of Compact Binaries. Physics 2019, 1, 412-429. https://doi.org/10.3390/physics1030030
Graziani L. Hunting for Dwarf Galaxies Hosting the Formation and Coalescence of Compact Binaries. Physics. 2019; 1(3):412-429. https://doi.org/10.3390/physics1030030
Chicago/Turabian StyleGraziani, Luca. 2019. "Hunting for Dwarf Galaxies Hosting the Formation and Coalescence of Compact Binaries" Physics 1, no. 3: 412-429. https://doi.org/10.3390/physics1030030