Tidal Disruption Event (TDE) Demographics
C.S. Kochanek (1) ((1) Department of Astronomy, The Ohio State, University)

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the demographics of Tidal Disruption Events (TDEs), exploring how their properties depend on black hole and stellar characteristics, and predicts how TDE rates vary with redshift and observational biases.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive model of TDE demographics considering black hole mass, stellar evolution, and redshift, highlighting the impact of observational biases on detected TDE populations.
Findings
TDEs around black holes less than 10^7 solar masses are mostly due to M-dwarf stars.
Evolved stars dominate TDEs at higher black hole masses.
TDE rates decline rapidly at higher redshifts.
Abstract
We survey the properties of stars destroyed in TDEs as a function of BH mass, stellar mass and evolutionary state, star formation history and redshift. For Mbh<10^7Msun, the typical TDE is due to a M*~0.3Msun M-dwarf, although the mass function is relatively flat for $M*<Msun. The contribution from older main sequence stars and sub-giants is small but not negligible. From Mbh~10^7.5-10^8.5Msun, the balance rapidly shifts to higher mass stars and a larger contribution from evolved stars, and is ultimately dominated by evolved stars at higher BH masses. The star formation history has little effect until the rates are dominated by evolved stars. TDE rates should decline very rapidly towards higher redshifts. The volumetric rate of TDEs is very high because the BH mass function diverges for low masses. However, any emission mechanism which is largely Eddington-limited for low BH masses…
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