Dynamical Unification of Tidal Disruption Events
Lars Lund Thomsen, Tom Kwan, Lixin Dai, Samantha Wu, Enrico, Ramirez-Ruiz

TL;DR
This study uses advanced simulations to confirm that the observed diversity in TDE emissions is primarily due to viewing angle and accretion rate, providing a unified model for their spectral evolution.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive 3D relativistic MHD simulation framework that explains the emission diversity of TDEs through viewing angle and accretion rate effects.
Findings
Emission properties depend on viewing angle as predicted by the unified model.
Higher accretion rates lead to increased wind density and optical-to-X-ray flux ratio.
Declining accretion rates open the funnel, allowing more X-ray emission at later times.
Abstract
About a hundred tidal disruption events (TDEs) have been observed and they exhibit a wide range of emission properties both at peak and over their lifetimes. Some TDEs peak predominantly at X-ray energies while others radiate chiefly at UV and optical wavelengths. While the peak luminosities across TDEs show distinct properties, the evolutionary behavior can also vary between TDEs with similar peak emission properties. At late time, some optical TDEs rebrighten in X-rays, while others maintain strong UV/optical emission components. In this Letter, we conduct three-dimensional general relativistic radiation magnetohydrodynamics simulations of TDE accretion disks at varying accretion rates ranging from a few to a few tens of the Eddington accretion rate. We make use of Monte Carlo radiative transfer simulations to calculate the reprocessed spectra at various inclinations and at different…
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