Delayed radio emission in tidal disruption events from collisions of outflows driven by disk instabilities
Samantha C. Wu, Daichi Tsuna, Brenna Mockler, and Anthony L. Piro

TL;DR
This paper models delayed radio emission in tidal disruption events as resulting from collisions of outflows driven by disk instabilities, successfully reproducing observed light curves and spectra.
Contribution
It introduces a model where outflow collisions from disk instabilities explain delayed radio emission in TDEs, matching observed properties.
Findings
Shocks from outflow collisions reach velocities of 0.05c-0.3c.
Radio luminosities of 10^{27}-10^{30} erg s^{-1} Hz^{-1} are produced.
Model reproduces observed TDE radio light curves and spectra.
Abstract
Delayed radio emission has been associated with a growing proportion of tidal disruption events (TDEs). For many events, the radio synchrotron emission is inferred to originate from the interaction of mildly-relativistic outflows, launched with delay times of -- d after the TDE optical peak. The mechanism behind these outflows remains uncertain, but may relate to instabilities or state transitions in the accretion disk formed from the TDE. We model the radio emission powered by the collision of mass outflows ("flares") from TDE accretion disks, considering scenarios in which two successive disk flares collide with each other, as well as collisions between the outflow and the circumnuclear medium (CNM). For flare masses of -, varied CNM densities, and different time intervals between ejected flares, we demonstrate that the shocks formed by the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
