Jet and disk luminosities in tidal disruption events
Tsvi Piran, Aleksander Sadowski, Alexander Tchekhovskoy

TL;DR
This paper uses numerical models to analyze how disk luminosity and jet power evolve during tidal disruption events, revealing they do not directly follow the accretion rate and highlighting key transitions affecting observable signals.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed numerical estimates of disk luminosity and jet power throughout TDEs, accounting for different accretion regimes and transitions.
Findings
Disk luminosity varies logarithmically with accretion rate at super-Eddington levels.
Jet power initially follows accretion rate but stabilizes after transition to sub-Eddington.
Jet may cease when the disk becomes thin at low accretion rates.
Abstract
Tidal disruption events (TDE) in which a star is devoured by a massive black hole at a galac- tic center pose a challenge to our understanding of accretion processes. Within a month the accretion rate reaches super-Eddington levels. It then drops gradually over a time scale of a year to sub-Eddington regimes. The initially geometrically thick disk becomes a thin one and eventually an ADAF at very low accretion rates. As such, TDEs explore the whole range of accretion rates and configurations. A challenging question is what the corresponding light curves of these events are. We explore numerically the disk luminosity and the conditions within the inner region of the disk using a fully general relativistic slim disk model. Those conditions determine the magnitude of the magnetic field that engulfs the black hole and this, in turn, determines the Blandford-Znajek jet power. We estimate…
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