Wind-reprocessed transients from stellar-mass black hole Tidal Disruption Events

Author:

Kremer Kyle12,Mockler Brenna2ORCID,Piro Anthony L2,Lombardi James C3

Affiliation:

1. TAPIR, California Institute of Technology , Pasadena, CA 91125, USA

2. The Observatories of the Carnegie Institution for Science , Pasadena, CA 91101, USA

3. Department of Physics, Allegheny College , Meadville, Pennsylvania 16335, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Tidal disruptions of stars by stellar-mass black holes are expected to occur frequently in dense star clusters. Building upon previous studies that performed hydrodynamic simulations of these encounters, we explore the formation and long-term evolution of the thick, super-Eddington accretion disks formed. We build a disk model that includes fallback of material from the tidal disruption, accretion onto the black hole, and disk mass losses through winds launched in association with the super-Eddington flow. We demonstrate that bright transients are expected when radiation from the central engine powered by accretion onto the black hole is reprocessed at large radii by the optically-thick disk wind. By combining hydrodynamic simulations of these disruption events with our disk + wind model, we compute light curves of these wind-reprocessed transients for a wide range of stellar masses and encounter penetration depths. We find typical peak bolometric luminosities of roughly $10^{41}\!-\!10^{44}\,$erg s−1 (depending mostly on accretion physics parameters) and temperatures of roughly $10^5\!-\!10^6\,$K, suggesting peak emission in the ultraviolet/blue bands. We predict all-sky surveys such as the Vera Rubin Observatory and ULTRASAT will detect up to thousands of these events per year in dense star clusters out to distances of several Gpc.

Funder

NASA

Space Telescope Science Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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