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1. Verfasser: Seoane, Pau Amaro
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2023
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.13043
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author Seoane, Pau Amaro
author_facet Seoane, Pau Amaro
contents We have evidence of X-ray flares in several galaxies consistent with a a star being tidally disrupted by a supermassive black hole (MBH). If the star starts on a nearly parabolic orbit relative to the MBH, one can derive that the fallback rate follows a $t^{-5/3}$ decay. Depending on the penetration factor, $β$, a star will be torn apart differently, and relativistic effects play a role. We have modified the standard version of the smoothed-particle hydrodynamics (SPH) code {\sc Gadget} to include a relativistic treatment of the gravitational forces between the gas particles of a main-sequence (MS) star and a MBH. We include non-spinning post-Newtonian corrections to incorpore the periapsis shift and the spin-orbit coupling up to next-to-lowest order. We find that tidal disruptions around MBHs in the relativistic cases are underluminous for values starting at $β\gtrapprox 2.25$; i.e. the fallback curves produced in the relativistic cases are progressively lower compared to the Newtonian simulations as the penetration parameter increases. While the Newtonian cases display a total disruption, we find that all relativistic counterparts feature a survival core for penetration factors going to values as high as $12.05$. We perform a additional dynamical numerical study which shows that the geodesics of the elements in the star converge at periapsis. We confirm these findings with an analytical study of the geodesic separation equation. The luminosity of TDEs must be lower than predicted theoretically due to the fact that the star will partially survive when relativistic effects are taken into account. A survival core should consistently emerge from any TDE with $β\gtrapprox 2.25$.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2307_13043
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Underluminous tidal disruptions
Seoane, Pau Amaro
High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
We have evidence of X-ray flares in several galaxies consistent with a a star being tidally disrupted by a supermassive black hole (MBH). If the star starts on a nearly parabolic orbit relative to the MBH, one can derive that the fallback rate follows a $t^{-5/3}$ decay. Depending on the penetration factor, $β$, a star will be torn apart differently, and relativistic effects play a role. We have modified the standard version of the smoothed-particle hydrodynamics (SPH) code {\sc Gadget} to include a relativistic treatment of the gravitational forces between the gas particles of a main-sequence (MS) star and a MBH. We include non-spinning post-Newtonian corrections to incorpore the periapsis shift and the spin-orbit coupling up to next-to-lowest order. We find that tidal disruptions around MBHs in the relativistic cases are underluminous for values starting at $β\gtrapprox 2.25$; i.e. the fallback curves produced in the relativistic cases are progressively lower compared to the Newtonian simulations as the penetration parameter increases. While the Newtonian cases display a total disruption, we find that all relativistic counterparts feature a survival core for penetration factors going to values as high as $12.05$. We perform a additional dynamical numerical study which shows that the geodesics of the elements in the star converge at periapsis. We confirm these findings with an analytical study of the geodesic separation equation. The luminosity of TDEs must be lower than predicted theoretically due to the fact that the star will partially survive when relativistic effects are taken into account. A survival core should consistently emerge from any TDE with $β\gtrapprox 2.25$.
title Underluminous tidal disruptions
topic High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.13043