# Evidence for rapid disk formation and reprocessing in the X-ray bright   tidal disruption event AT 2018fyk

**Authors:** T. Wevers, D. R. Pasham, S. van Velzen, G. Leloudas, S. Schulze, J. C., A. Miller-Jones, P. G. Jonker, M. Gromadzki, E. Kankare, S. T. Hodgkin, L, .Wyrzykowski, Z.Kostrzewa-Rutkowska, S.Moran, M.Berton, K. Maguire, F. Onori,, S. Matilla, M. Nicholl

arXiv: 1903.12203 · 2019-07-31

## TL;DR

This paper reports on optical and X-ray observations of the TDE AT 2018fyk, revealing rapid disk formation, reprocessing of emission, and spectral features indicating complex nuclear activity.

## Contribution

It provides new insights into the spectral evolution and lightcurve behavior of TDEs, highlighting the presence of Fe-rich lines and reprocessing mechanisms.

## Key findings

- Detection of broad and narrow emission lines, including Fe II and O III.
- Identification of a plateau phase in UV/optical lightcurve.
- Evidence for efficient reprocessing of central emission into UV/optical wavelengths.

## Abstract

We present optical spectroscopic and Swift UVOT/XRT observations of the X-ray and UV/optical bright tidal disruption event (TDE) AT 2018fyk/ASASSN-18ul discovered by ASAS-SN. The Swift lightcurve is atypical for a TDE, entering a plateau after $\sim$40 days of decline from peak. After 80 days the UV/optical lightcurve breaks again to decline further, while the X-ray emission becomes brighter and harder. In addition to broad H, He and potentially O/Fe lines, narrow emission lines emerge in the optical spectra during the plateau phase. We identify both high ionisation (O III) and low ionisation (Fe II) lines, which are visible for $\sim$45 days. We similarly identify Fe II lines in optical spectra of ASASSN-15oi 330 d after discovery, indicating that a class of Fe-rich TDEs exists. The spectral similarity between AT 2018fyk, narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies and some extreme coronal line emitters suggests that TDEs are capable of creating similar physical conditions in the nuclei of galaxies. The Fe II lines can be associated with the formation of a compact accretion disk, as the emergence of low ionisation emission lines requires optically thick, high density gas. Taken together with the plateau in X-ray and UV/optical luminosity this indicates that emission from the central source is efficiently reprocessed into UV/optical wavelengths. Such a two-component lightcurve is very similar to that seen in the TDE candidate ASASSN-15lh, and is a natural consequence of a highly relativistic orbital pericenter.

## Full text

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## Figures

12 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.12203/full.md

## References

119 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.12203/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.12203