Stellar disruption by a supermassive black hole: is the light curve really proportional to $t^{-5/3}$?
G. Lodato (1), A. R. King (1), J. E. Pringle (1,2) ((1) Department of, Physics, Astronomy, University of Leicester, UK (2) Institute of, Astronomy, University of Cambridge, UK)

TL;DR
This paper revisits the expected lightcurve of stellar tidal disruption by supermassive black holes, showing that the canonical t^{-5/3} decay only occurs at late times and varies with stellar structure.
Contribution
It introduces an analytic model linking the lightcurve to stellar density profiles and validates it with numerical simulations, revealing deviations from t^{-5/3} near peak luminosity.
Findings
The t^{-5/3} decay law applies only at late stages of disruption.
More centrally concentrated stars exhibit shallower early lightcurves.
Simulations show the t^{-5/3} law emerges after significant luminosity decline.
Abstract
In this paper we revisit the arguments for the basis of the time evolution of the flares expected to arise when a star is disrupted by a supermassive black hole. We present a simple analytic model relating the lightcurve to the internal density structure of the star. We thus show that the standard lightcurve proportional to only holds at late times. Close to the peak luminosity the lightcurve is shallower, deviating more strongly from for more centrally concentrated (e.g. solar--type) stars. We test our model numerically by simulating the tidal disruption of several stellar models, described by simple polytropic spheres with index . The simulations agree with the analytical model given two considerations. First, the stars are somewhat inflated on reaching pericentre because of the effective reduction of gravity in the tidal field of the black hole. This is…
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