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Optical discovery of a relativistic jet from the tidal disruption of a star by a supermassive black hole

Authors :
Igor Andreoni
Michael Coughlin
Daniel Perley
Yuhan Yao
Wenbin Lu
S. Cenko
Harsh Kumar
Shreya Anand
Anna Ho
Mansi Kasliwal
Antonio de Ugarte Postigo
Ana Sagués-Carracedo
Steve Schulze
Shri Kulkarni
Jesper Sollerman
Nial Tanvir
Armin Rest
Tomás Ahumada
G. Anupama
Katie Auchettl
Sudhanshu Barway
Eric Bellm
Varun Bhalerao
Joshua Bloom
Michael Bremer
Mattia Bulla
Eric Burns
Sergio Campana
Poonam Chandra
Panos Charalampopoulos
Jeff Cooke
Valerio D'Elia
Kaustav Das
Dougal Dobie
José Agüí Fernández
James Freeburn
Christoffer Fremling
Suvi Gezari
Matthew Graham
Erica Hammerstein
Luca Izzo
David Alexander Kann
David Kaplan
Viraj Karambelkar
Erik Kool
Melanie Krips
Russ Laher
Giorgos Leloudas
Andrew Levan
Michael Lundquist
Ashish Mahabal
Michael Medford
M. Miller
Anais Moller
Kunal Mooley
A Nayana
Guy Nir
Peter Pang
Emmy Paraskeva
Richard Perley
Glen Petitpas
Miika Pursiainen
Vikram Ravi
Ryan Ridden-Harper
Reed Riddle
Mickael Rigault
Antonio Rodriguez
Benjamin Rusholme
Yashvi Sharma
I. Smith
Jean Somalwar
Christina Thöne
Francisco Valdes
Jan van Roestel
Susanna Vergani
Qinan Wang
Jielai Zhang
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Tidal disruption events (TDEs) are bursts of electromagnetic energy released when supermassive black holes at the center of galaxies violently disrupt stars that pass too close. TDEs provide a new window to study accretion onto supermassive black holes; in some cases, this accretion leads to launching of a relativistic jet, but the necessary conditions are not fully understood. Here, we report the optical discovery of AT2022cmc, a rapidly fading source located at redshift z=1.19325. Observations of a bright counterpart at other wavelengths, including X-rays, sub-millimeter, and radio, supports the interpretation of AT2022cmc as a jetted TDE containing a synchrotron ``afterglow.'' Using 4 years of Zwicky Transient Facility survey data, we calculated a rate of 0.02 ^{+ 0.04 }_{- 0.01 } Gpc^{-3} yr^{-1} for jetted TDEs based on the luminous, fast-fading red component, thus providing a measurement complementary to the rates derived from X--ray and radio observations (Brown et al., 2015), confirming that ~1% of TDEs have on-axis jets. Forthcoming observations of AT2022cmc could resolve the jet through high-resolution imaging, while optical surveys have the potential to unveil a population of cosmological flares of the AT2022cmc class.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........bd0c5688cdb9ff526f50a3f3507ea93c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-1527213/v1