Evolution of Accretion Disks in Tidal Disruption Events
Rong-Feng Shen, Christopher D. Matzner (University of Toronto)

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution of accretion disks in tidal disruption events, highlighting how disk spreading, winds, and precession influence observable light curves and can explain features like quasi-periodic dips.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive model of TDE disk evolution that includes spreading, wind effects, thermal instability, and precession, providing a dynamic framework for interpreting light curves.
Findings
Disk spreading can lead to super-Eddington accretion rates.
Precession causes quasi-periodic modulation in light curves.
Application to Swift J1644+57 supports a disrupted star by an intermediate mass black hole.
Abstract
During a stellar tidal disruption event (TDE), an accretion disk forms as stellar debris returns to the disruption site and circularizes. Rather than being confined within the circularizing radius, the disk can spread to larger radii to conserve angular momentum. A spreading disk is a source of matter for re-accretion at rates which can exceed the later stellar fallback rate, although a disk wind can suppress its contribution to the central black hole accretion rate. A spreading disk is detectible through a break in the central accretion rate history, or, at longer wavelengths, by its own emission. We model the evolution of TDE disk size and accretion rate, by accounting for the time-dependent fallback rate, for the influence of wind losses in the early, advective stage, and for the possibility of thermal instability for accretion rates intermediate between the advection-dominated and…
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