Supernova explosions in active galactic nuclear discs
Evgeni Grishin, Alexey Bobrick, Ryosuke Hirai, Ilya Mandel, Hagai B., Perets

TL;DR
This paper models supernova explosions occurring within active galactic nucleus discs, predicting their observable signatures, luminosities, and event rates, and validates the models with hydrodynamics simulations.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical and simulation-based framework for understanding supernovae in AGN discs, highlighting their unique signatures and potential observability.
Findings
Peak luminosities can exceed 10^{45} erg/s.
Brightest events occur off-plane or around low-mass black holes.
Estimated event rate is up to 100 per year per Gpc^3.
Abstract
Active galactic nuclei (AGN) are prominent environments for stellar capture, growth and formation. These environments may catalyze stellar mergers and explosive transients, such as thermonuclear and core-collapse supernovae (SNe). SN explosions in AGN discs generate strong shocks, leading to unique observable signatures. We develop an analytical model which follows the evolution of the shock propagating in the disc until it eventually breaks out. We derive the peak luminosity, bolometric lightcurve, and breakout time. The peak luminosities may exceed erg s and last from hours to days. The brightest explosions occur in regions of reduced density; either off-plane, or in discs around low-mass central black holes (), or in starved subluminous AGNs. Explosions in the latter two sites are easier to observe due to a reduced AGN background luminosity. We…
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