Tidal Disruption of a Star on a Nearly Circular Orbit
Itai Linial, Eliot Quataert

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new class of nuclear transients called Circular Tidal Disruption Events (TDEs), caused by Roche lobe overflow from a star on a nearly circular orbit onto a supermassive black hole, with unique observational signatures.
Contribution
It proposes the concept of Circular TDEs, explores their physical mechanisms, and discusses their potential observational signatures and connections to other transient phenomena.
Findings
Circular TDEs produce bright optical/UV flares lasting weeks to months.
They generate long-lasting X-ray precursors and post-cursors.
Outflows create a circum-nuclear environment conducive to bright radio emission.
Abstract
We consider Roche lobe overflow (RLO) from a low-mass star on a nearly circular orbit, onto a supermassive black hole (SMBH). If mass transfer is unstable, its rate accelerates in a runaway process, resulting in highly super-Eddington mass accretion rates, accompanied by an optically-thick outflow emanating from the SMBH vicinity. This produces a week-month long, bright optical/Ultraviolet flare, accompanied by a year-decade long X-ray precursor and post-cursor emitted from the accretion flow onto the SMBH. Such ``Circular Tidal Disruption Events (TDEs)" represent a new class of nuclear transients, occurring at up to of the canonical parabolic tidal disruption event rate. Near breakup rotation and strong tidal deformation of the star prior to disruption could lead to strong magnetic fields, making circular-TDEs possible progenitors of jetted TDEs. Outflows prior to the final…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Satellite Systems and Control · Astro and Planetary Science
