Tidal disruption events in the first billion years of a galaxy
Hugo Pfister, Jane Dai, Marta Volonteri, Katie Auchettl, Maxime, Trebitsch, Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz

TL;DR
This study introduces a new model for tidal disruption events in cosmological simulations, showing their role in early galaxy and black hole growth, with implications for understanding the early universe and black hole formation.
Contribution
It presents the first self-consistent cosmological simulation of TDEs, linking stellar disruptions to black hole growth and galaxy evolution at high redshift.
Findings
TDE rate of ~10^-5 yr^-1 at z=6 matches local observations
TDEs significantly contribute to seed black hole growth in early galaxies
Galaxy mergers increase TDE rates by about an order of magnitude during mergers
Abstract
Accretion of stars on massive black holes (MBHs) can feed MBHs and generate tidal disruption events (TDEs). We introduce a new physically motivated model to self-consistently treat TDEs in cosmological simulations, and apply it to the assembly of a galaxy with final mass at . This galaxy exhibits a TDE rate of , consistent with local observations but already in place when the Universe was one billion year old. A fraction of the disrupted stars participate in the growth of MBHs, dominating it until the MBH reaches mass , but their contribution then becomes negligible compared to gas. TDEs could be a viable mechanism to grow light MBH seeds, but fewer TDEs are expected when the MBH becomes sufficiently massive to reach the luminosity of, and be detected as, an active galactic…
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