Radio observations of the tidal disruption event AT2020opy: a luminous non-relativistic outflow encountering a dense circumnuclear medium

Tidal disruption events (TDEs) occur when a star passes too close to a supermassive black hole and is destroyed by tidal gravitational forces. Radio observations of TDEs trace synchrotron emission from outflowing material that may be ejected from the inner regions of the accretion flow around the SM...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2022-08
Hauptverfasser: Goodwin, Adelle J, Miller-Jones, James, Sjoert van Velzen, Bietenholz, Michael, Greenland, Jasper, Cenko, Brad, Gezari, Suvi, Horesh, Assaf, Sivakoff, Gregory R, Lin, Yan, Wen-fei, Yu, Zhang, Xian
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container_title arXiv.org
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creator Goodwin, Adelle J
Miller-Jones, James
Sjoert van Velzen
Bietenholz, Michael
Greenland, Jasper
Cenko, Brad
Gezari, Suvi
Horesh, Assaf
Sivakoff, Gregory R
Lin, Yan
Wen-fei, Yu
Zhang, Xian
description Tidal disruption events (TDEs) occur when a star passes too close to a supermassive black hole and is destroyed by tidal gravitational forces. Radio observations of TDEs trace synchrotron emission from outflowing material that may be ejected from the inner regions of the accretion flow around the SMBH or by the tidal debris stream. Radio detections of tidal disruption events are rare, but provide crucial information about the launching of jets and outflows from supermassive black holes and the circumnuclear environment in galaxies. Here we present the radio detection of the TDE AT2020opy, including three epochs of radio observations taken with the Karl G. Jansky's Very Large Array (VLA), MeerKAT, and upgraded Giant Metrewave Radio telescope. AT2020opy is the most distant thermal TDE with radio emission reported to date, and from modelling the evolving synchrotron spectra we deduce that the host galaxy has a more dense circumnuclear medium than other thermal TDEs detected in the radio band. Based on an equipartition analysis of the synchrotron spectral properties of the event, we conclude that the radio-emitting outflow was likely launched approximately at the time of, or just after, the initial optical flare. We find no evidence for relativistic motion of the outflow. The high luminosity of this event supports that a dense circumnuclear medium of the host galaxy produces brighter radio emission that rises to a peak more quickly than in galaxies with lower central densities.
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subjects Deposition
Disruption
Galaxies
Luminosity
Outflow
Physics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
Radio astronomy
Radio emission
Radio observation
Radio telescopes
Relativistic effects
Space telescopes
Spectral emittance
Stars & galaxies
Supermassive black holes
Synchrotrons
title Radio observations of the tidal disruption event AT2020opy: a luminous non-relativistic outflow encountering a dense circumnuclear medium
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