The puzzling source IGR J17361-4441 in NGC 6388: a possible planetary tidal disruption event
Melania Del Santo, Achille A. Nucita, Giuseppe Lodato, Luigi Manni,, Francesco De Paolis, Jay Farihi, Giovanni De Cesare, Alberto Segreto

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the transient X-ray source IGR J17361-4441 in NGC 6388, proposing it as a possible planetary tidal disruption event involving a white dwarf and a minor body, supported by spectral and temporal analysis.
Contribution
It introduces the hypothesis that IGR J17361-4441 is a planetary tidal disruption event, supported by detailed spectral and light curve analysis, a novel interpretation for such a transient.
Findings
Light curve follows a t^{-5/3} decay trend.
Spectral analysis indicates a thermal component with stable temperature.
Estimated disruption rate aligns with observed event frequency.
Abstract
On 2011 August 11, INTEGRAL discovered the hard X-ray source IGR J17361-4441 near the centre of the globular cluster NGC 6388. Follow up observations with Chandra showed the position of the transient was inconsistent with the cluster dynamical centre, and thus not related to its possible intermediate mass black hole. The source showed a peculiar hard spectrum (Gamma \approx 0.8) and no evidence of QPOs, pulsations, type-I bursts, or radio emission. Based on its peak luminosity, IGR J17361-4441 was classified as a very faint X-ray transient, and most likely a low-mass X-ray binary. We re-analysed 200 days of Swift/XRT observations, covering the whole outburst of IGR J17361-4441 and find a t^{-5/3} trend evident in the light curve, and a thermal emission component that does not evolve significantly with time. We investigate whether this source could be a tidal disruption event, and for…
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