AT2018fyk: Candidate Tidal Disruption Event by a (Super)massive Black Hole Binary
S. Wen, P.G. Jonker, A.J. Levan, D. Li, N.C. Stone, A.I. Zabludoff, Z., Cao, T. Wevers, D.R. Pasham, C. Lewin, and E. Kara

TL;DR
This paper presents evidence that the tidal disruption event AT2018fyk was caused by a binary supermassive black hole system, with detailed analysis of light curves, spectra, and binary parameters revealing the nature of the disruption and accretion processes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed model of a TDE involving a supermassive black hole binary, explaining complex light curve behavior and constraining the binary's properties.
Findings
The secondary black hole has a mass of approximately 2.7 x 10^5 solar masses.
The primary black hole's mass is about 10^7.7 solar masses, smaller than host galaxy predictions.
The binary separation is constrained to about 0.0067 parsecs.
Abstract
The tidal disruption event (TDE) AT2018fyk has unusual X-ray, UV, and optical light curves that decay over the first 600d, rebrighten, and decay again around 1200d. We explain this behavior as a one-off TDE associated with a massive black hole (BH) \emph{binary}. The sharp drop-offs from power laws at around 600d naturally arise when one BH interrupts the debris fallback onto the other BH. The BH mass derived from fitting X-ray spectra with a slim disk accretion model and, independently, from fitting the early UV/optical light curves, is smaller by two orders of magnitude than predicted from the -- host galaxy relation, suggesting that the debris is accreted onto the secondary, with fallback cut off by the primary. Furthermore, if the rebrightening were associated with the primary, it should occur around 5000d, not the observed 1200d.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
