Repeating nuclear transients from repeating partial tidal disruption events: reproducing ASASSN-14ko and AT2020vdq
Ananya Bandopadhyay, Eric R. Coughlin, C. J. Nixon, Dheeraj R. Pasham

TL;DR
This study models repeating nuclear transients as partial tidal disruption events, showing how different star types produce observable flares and matching specific observed phenomena like ASASSN-14ko.
Contribution
It provides analytical estimates and hydrodynamical simulations demonstrating how stellar mass and evolution influence repeat flare characteristics in rpTDEs.
Findings
Higher-mass, evolved stars can survive multiple encounters with SMBHs.
Reproduces the periodicity and amplitude of ASASSN-14ko flares.
Lower-mass stars lead to rapid destruction, explaining other transient types.
Abstract
Some electromagnetic outbursts from the nuclei of distant galaxies have been found to repeat on months-to-years timescales, and each of these sources can putatively arise from the accretion flares generated through the repeated tidal stripping of a star on a bound orbit about a supermassive black hole (SMBH), i.e., a repeating partial tidal disruption event (rpTDE). Here we test the rpTDE model through analytical estimates and hydrodynamical simulations of the interaction between a range of stars, which differ from one another in mass and age, and an SMBH. We show that higher-mass (), evolved stars can survive many () encounters with an SMBH while simultaneously losing , resulting in accretion flares that are approximately evenly spaced in time with nearly the same amplitude, quantitatively reproducing ASASSN-14ko. We also…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear reactor physics and engineering · NMR spectroscopy and applications · Atmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics
