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Free keywords:
QUASI-PERIODIC ERUPTIONS; MASS-RATIO INSPIRALS; TIDAL DISRUPTION EVENTS;
GRAVITATIONAL-WAVE; CONVECTIVE BOUNDARIES; STELLAR EVOLUTION; DISK
COLLISIONS; ASTROPHYSICS; MODULES; ACCRETIONAstronomy & Astrophysics;
Abstract:
Some stars orbiting supermassive black holes (SMBHs) are expected to undergo a gravitational wave (GW)-driven inspiral and initiate mass transfer on nearly circular orbits. However, the stability and duration of such phases remain unexplored. In this work, we focus on the evolution of a low-mass, radiative-envelope subgiant star being stripped by an SMBH. We find that such systems can undergo a long-lasting, stable mass transfer phase, even if none of the angular momentum of the transferred material returns to the orbit to counterbalance the GW-driven decay. We show an example where a 2 M circle dot subgiant is stripped before entering the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) band and loses almost its entire hydrogen envelope. The remaining helium core undergoes a prolonged GW-driven inspiral, becoming a loud LISA source. If formed in our Galaxy, the system would be detectable for several hundred thousand years, ultimately reaching extreme signal-to-noise ratios of a million. Hydrogen shell flashes in the residual envelope cause temporary radial expansions of the stripped star. As a result, a few additional phases of rapid mass transfer occur at orbital periods of 20-30 hr. Eventually, the core possibly undergoes circular partial tidal disruption at an orbital period of similar to 10 minutes, corresponding to a GW emission frequency of a few mHz. We estimate a chance of about 1% that such a detectable LISA source exists in our own Galactic center. The loud final GW transient may lead to a few detections reaching as far as similar to 1 Gpc, including, e.g., the Abell clusters.