Tidal Disruption Events from three-body scatterings and eccentricity pumping in the disks of Active Galactic Nuclei
Chaitanya Prasad, Yihan Wang, Rosalba Perna, K. E. Saavik Ford, Barry, McKernan

TL;DR
This study models how three-body interactions in AGN disks can lead to tidal disruption events, predicting their rates and emphasizing their importance in understanding AGN variability and embedded object populations.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed scattering experiment approach to estimate TDE and micro-TDE rates in AGN disks, highlighting their occurrence during early AGN phases.
Findings
AGN TDE rates are higher in early AGN stages.
Micro-TDEs occur throughout the AGN lifetime.
Predicted TDE rates depend on black hole to star density ratio.
Abstract
Tidal Disruption Events (TDEs) are routinely observed in quiescent galaxies, as stars from the nuclear star cluster are scattered into the loss cone of the central supermassive black hole (SMBH). TDEs are also expected to occur in Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), due to scattering or orbital eccentricity pumping of stars embedded in the innermost regions of the AGN accretion disk. Encounters with embedded stellar-mass black holes (BH) can result in AGN TDEs. AGN TDEs and TDEs could therefore account for a fraction of observed AGN variability. Here, by performing scattering experiments with the few-body code {\tt SpaceHub}, we compute the probability of AGN TDEs and TDEs as a result of 3-body interactions between stars and binary BHs. We find that AGN TDEs are more probable during the early life of the AGNs, when rates are $\sim (6\times 10^{-5}-5 \times 10^{-2})…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
