A tidal disruption flare in a massive galaxy? Implications for the fuelling mechanisms of nuclear black holes
A. Merloni, T. Dwelly, M. Salvato, A. Georgakakis, J. Greiner, M., Krumpe, K. Nandra, G. Ponti, A. Rau (MPE, Garching)

TL;DR
This paper presents evidence that a luminous flare in a massive galaxy is likely a tidal disruption event, providing insights into black hole fueling mechanisms and the interplay with gas accretion in galactic nuclei.
Contribution
It offers a detailed analysis of a TDE candidate in a massive galaxy, linking the event to black hole fueling and residual accretion, and discusses implications for future TDE detection.
Findings
The flare's evolution matches the $t^{-5/3}$ decay law.
Spectroscopic data suggest residual accretion occurred years after the flare.
Constraints on the disrupted star's properties and nuclear environment were derived.
Abstract
We argue that the `changing look' AGN recently reported by LaMassa et al. could be a luminous flare produced by the tidal disruption of a super-solar mass star passing just a few gravitational radii outside the event horizon of a nuclear black hole. This flare occurred in a massive, star forming galaxy at redshift , robustly characterized thanks to repeated late-time photometric and spectroscopic observations. By taking difference-photometry of the well sampled multi-year SDSS Stripe-82 light-curve, we are able to probe the evolution of the nuclear spectrum over the course of the outburst. The tidal disruption event (TDE) interpretation is consistent with the very rapid rise and the decay time of the flare, which displays an evolution consistent with the well-known behaviour (with a clear superimposed re-brightening flare). Our analysis places…
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