Jetted Tidal Disruptions of Stars as a Flag of Intermediate Mass Black Holes at High Redshifts
Anastasia Fialkov (1), Abraham Loeb (1) ((1) ITC, Harvard)

TL;DR
This paper explores how jetted TDEs and binary black hole TDEs can serve as indicators of intermediate mass black holes at high redshifts, with implications for future X-ray surveys and gravitational wave detection.
Contribution
It demonstrates that high-redshift jetted TDEs are likely produced by massive black hole binaries with high IMBH occupancy, and predicts observable TDE rates for future X-ray telescopes.
Findings
Brightest TDEs linked to massive black hole binaries
X-ray luminosity function depends on IMBH occupancy
Future telescopes could detect 6-20 TDEs per deep field
Abstract
Tidal disruption events (TDEs) of stars by single or binary supermassive black holes (SMBHs) brighten galactic nuclei and reveal a population of otherwise dormant black holes. Adopting event rates from the literature, we aim to establish general trends in the redshift evolution of the TDE number counts and their observable signals. We pay particular attention to two types of TDEs which are expected to be observable out to high redshifts, namely (i) jetted TDEs whose luminosity is boosted by relativistic beaming, and (ii) TDEs around binary black holes. We show that the brightest (jetted) TDEs are expected to be produced by massive black hole binaries if the occupancy of intermediate mass black holes (IMBHs) in low mass galaxies is high. The same binary population will also provide gravitational wave sources for eLISA. In addition, we find that the shape of the X-ray luminosity function…
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