Tidal Disruption of a Main-sequence Star by an Intermediate-mass Black Hole: A Bright Decade

There has been suggestive evidence of intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs; 103−5 M ) existing in some globular clusters (GCs) and dwarf galaxies, but IMBHs as a population remain elusive. As a main-sequence star passes too close by an IMBH it might be tidally captured and disrupted. We study the lo...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2018-11, Vol.867 (1), p.20
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Jin-Hong, Shen, Rong-Feng
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:There has been suggestive evidence of intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs; 103−5 M ) existing in some globular clusters (GCs) and dwarf galaxies, but IMBHs as a population remain elusive. As a main-sequence star passes too close by an IMBH it might be tidally captured and disrupted. We study the long-term accretion and observational consequence of such tidal disruption events. The disruption radius is hundreds to thousands of the BH's Schwarzschild radius, so the circularization of the falling-back debris stream is very inefficient due to weak general relativity effects. Due to this and a high mass fallback rate, the bound debris initially goes through a ∼10 yr long super-Eddington accretion phase. The photospheric emission of the outflow ejected during this phase dominates the observable radiation and peaks in the UV/optical bands with a luminosity of . After the accretion rate drops below the Eddington rate, the bolometric luminosity follows the conventional t−5/3 power-law decay, and X-rays from the inner accretion disk start to be seen. Modeling the newly reported IMBH tidal disruption event candidate 3XMM J2150-0551, we find a general consistency between the data and predictions. The search for these luminous, long-term events in GCs and nearby dwarf galaxies could unveil the IMBH population.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
DOI:10.3847/1538-4357/aadfda