Stellar Tidal Disruption Events in General Relativity

Date

2019-02-12

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Springer/Plenum Publishers

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Abstract

A tidal disruption event (TDE) ensues when a star passes too close to a supermassive black hole (SMBH) in a galactic center, and is ripped apart by its tidal field. The gaseous debris produced in a TDE can power a bright electromagnetic flare as it is accreted by the SMBH; so far, several dozen TDE candidates have been observed. For SMBHs with masses above approximate to 10⁷ M⊙, the tidal disruption of solar-type stars occurs within ten gravitational radii of the SMBH, implying that general relativity (GR) is needed to describe gravity. Three promising signatures of GR in TDEs are: (1) a super-exponential cutoff in the volumetric TDE rate for SMBH masses above approximate to 10⁸ M⊙ due to direct capture of tidal debris by the event horizon, (2) delays in accretion disk formation (and a consequent alteration of the early-time light curve) caused by the effects of relativistic nodal precession on stream circularization, and (3) quasi-periodic modulation of X-ray emission due to global precession of misaligned accretion disks and the jets they launch. We review theoretical models and simulations of TDEs in Newtonian gravity, then describe how relativistic modifications give rise to these proposed observational signatures, as well as more speculative effects of GR. We conclude with a brief summary of TDE observations and the extent to which they show indications of these predicted relativistic signatures.

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Keywords

Black holes (Astronomy) spin, Relativistic astrophysics, Space and time, General relativity (Physics), X-rays, Galactic nuclei, Magnetohydrodynamics, Simulations, White dwarf stars, Cygnus X-1, Stars, Astronomy, Astrophysics, Physics

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Einstein Postdoctoral Fellowship Award Number PF5-160145; Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Grant FG-2015-65299; NSF Grant PHY-1607031; NASA Grant 17-ATP17-0045; U.S. Dept. of Energy, and supported by its contract W-7405-ENG-36 to Los Alamos National Laboratory

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©2019 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature

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