Repository logo
 

Adiabatic Mass Loss in Binary Stars. V. Effects of Metallicity and Nonconservative Mass Transfer—Application in High Mass X-Ray Binaries

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Change log

Abstract

Binary stars are responsible for many unusual astrophysical phenomena, including some important explosive cosmic events. The stability criteria for rapid mass transfer and common-envelope evolution are fundamental to binary star evolution. They determine the mass, mass ratio, and orbital distribution of systems such as X-ray binaries and merging gravitational-wave sources. We use our adiabatic mass-loss model to systematically survey metal-poor and solar-metallicity donor thresholds for dynamical timescale mass transfer. The critical mass ratios q ad are systematically explored and the impact of metallicity and nonconservative mass transfer are studied. For metal-poor radiative-envelope donors, q ad are smaller than those for solar-metallicity stars at the same evolutionary stage. However, q ad do the opposite for convective-envelope donors. Nonconservative mass transfer significantly decreases q ad for massive donors. This is because it matters how conservative mass transfer is during the thermal timescale phase immediately preceding a delayed dynamical mass transfer. We apply our theoretical predictions to observed high-mass X-ray binaries that have overfilled their Roche lobes and find a good agreement with their mass ratios. Our results can be applied to study individual binary objects or large samples of binary objects with binary population synthesis codes.

Description

Acknowledgements: We thank the referee for the valuable comments and suggestions. This project is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC Nos. 12288102, 12125303, 12090040/3, 12173081, 12273057, 12473034, 12103086, 12233002, U2031205), the National Key R&D Program of China (Nos. 2021YFA1600403, 2021YFA1600401, 2021YFA0718500), the Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences, CAS (No. ZDBS-LY-7005), CAS-Light of West China Program, Yunnan Fundamental Research Projects (Nos. 202101AV070001, 202201BC070003, 202401BC070007, 202401AT070139, 202201AU070234), Yunnan Revitalization Talent Support Program—Science & Technology Champion Project (No. 202305AB350003), and the International Centre of Supernovae, Yunnan Key Laboratory (No. 202302AN360001). H.G. thanks Professor Ronald Webbink for helpful discussions in building the adiabatic mass-loss model. H.G. thanks Boyuan Liu, a postdoctoral research associate at the Institute of Astronomy at the University of Cambridge, for useful comments. C.A.T. thanks Churchill College for the fellowship.

Journal Title

The Astrophysical Journal

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0004-637X
1538-4357

Volume Title

975

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
National natural science foundation of China (12288102)