Litcius/Paper detail

Global simulations of tidal disruption event disc formation via stream injection in GRRMHD

Brandon Curd

2021Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT We use the general relativistic radiation magnetohydrodynamics code KORAL to simulate the accretion disc formation resulting from the tidal disruption of a solar mass star around a supermassive black hole (BH) of mass 106 M⊙. We simulate the disruption of artificially more bound stars with orbital eccentricity e ≤ 0.99 (compared to the more realistic case of parabolic orbits with e = 1) on close orbits with impact parameter β ≥ 3. We use a novel method of injecting the tidal stream into the domain, and we begin the stream injection at the peak fallback rate in this study. For two simulations, we choose e = 0.99 and inject mass at a rate that is similar to parabolic TDEs. We find that the disc only becomes mildly circularized with eccentricity e ≈ 0.6 within the 3.5 d that we simulate. The rate of circularization is faster for pericenter radii that come closer to the BH. The emitted radiation is mildly super-Eddington with $L_{\rm {bol}}\approx 3{-}5\, L_{\rm {Edd}}$ and the photosphere is highly asymmetric with the photosphere being significantly closer to the inner accretion disc for viewing angles near pericenter. We find that soft X-ray radiation with Trad ≈ 3–5 × 105 K may be visible for chance viewing angles. Our simulations suggest that TDEs should be radiatively inefficient with η ≈ 0.009–0.014.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsEvent (particle physics)AstronomyAstrophysicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovaeearthquake and tectonic studiesPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
Global simulations of tidal disruption event disc formation via stream injection in GRRMHD | Litcius