AT 2020wey and the class of faint and fast Tidal Disruption Events
Panos Charalampopoulos, Miika Pursiainen, Giorgos Leloudas, Iair, Arcavi, Megan Newsome, Steve Schulze, Jamison Burke, Matt Nicholl

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the faint and fast tidal disruption event AT 2020wey, revealing its unique properties, rapid decline, and implications for the population and physical mechanisms of TDEs.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of a faint, fast TDE, showing its distinct decline and spectral features, and suggests faint TDEs are more common than previously thought.
Findings
AT 2020wey is the faintest and fastest declining TDE observed.
Faint TDEs may constitute up to 50-60% of all TDEs.
The optical luminosity function follows a steep power-law with index -2.36.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the optical and UV properties of AT 2020wey, a faint and fast tidal disruption event (TDE) at 124.3 Mpc. The light curve of the object peaked at an absolute magnitude of mag and a maximum bolometric luminosity of erg s, making it comparably faint with iPTF16fnl, the faintest TDE to date. The time from the last non-detection to the -band peak is 22.94 2.03 days and the rise is well described by . The decline of the bolometric light curve is described by a sharp exponential decay steeper than the canonical power law, making AT 2020wey the fastest declining TDE to date. Multi-wavelength fits to the light curve indicate a complete disruption of a star of by a black hole of . Our spectroscopic dataset reveals…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
