Rapid Dimming Followed by a State Transition: A Study of the Highly Variable Nuclear Transient AT 2019avd over 1000+ Days

The tidal disruption of a star around a supermassive black hole (SMBH) offers a unique opportunity to study accretion onto an SMBH on a human timescale. We present results from our 1000+ days monitoring campaign of AT 2019avd, a nuclear transient with tidal-disruption-event-like properties, with NIC...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Astrophysical journal 2024-02, Vol.962 (1), p.78
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Yanan, Pasham, Dheeraj R., Altamirano, Diego, Gúrpide, Andrés, Castro Segura, Noel, Middleton, Matthew, Ji, Long, del Palacio, Santiago, Guolo, Muryel, Gandhi, Poshak, Zhang, Shuang-Nan, Remillard, Ronald, Lin, Dacheng, Masterson, Megan, Baldi, Ranieri D., Tombesi, Francesco, Miller, Jon M., Zhang, Wenda, Sanna, Andrea
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The tidal disruption of a star around a supermassive black hole (SMBH) offers a unique opportunity to study accretion onto an SMBH on a human timescale. We present results from our 1000+ days monitoring campaign of AT 2019avd, a nuclear transient with tidal-disruption-event-like properties, with NICER, Swift, and Chandra. Our primary finding is that approximately 225 days following the peak of the X-ray emission, there is a rapid drop in luminosity exceeding 2 orders of magnitude. This X-ray dropoff is accompanied by X-ray spectral hardening, followed by a plateau phase of 740 days. During this phase, the spectral index decreases from 6.2 ± 1.1 to 2.3 ± 0.4, while the disk temperature remains constant. Additionally, we detect pronounced X-ray variability, with an average fractional rms amplitude of 47%, manifesting over timescales of a few dozen minutes. We propose that this phenomenon may be attributed to intervening clumpy outflows. The overall properties of AT 2019avd suggest that the accretion disk evolves from a super-Eddington to a sub-Eddington luminosity state, possibly associated with a compact jet. This evolution follows a pattern in the hardness–intensity diagram similar to that observed in stellar-mass BHs, supporting the mass invariance of accretion–ejection processes around BHs.
ISSN:0004-637X
1538-4357
1538-4357
DOI:10.3847/1538-4357/ad182b