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The Tidal Disruption Event AT 2018hyz II: Light Curve Modeling of a Partially Disrupted Star

Authors :
Gomez, Sebastian
Nicholl, Matt
Short, Philip
Margutti, Raffaella
Alexander, Kate D.
Blanchard, Peter K.
Berger, Edo
Eftekhari, Tarraneh
Schulze, Steve
Anderson, Joseph
Arcavi, Iair
Chornock, Ryan
Cowperthwaite, Philip S.
Galbany, Lluís
Herzog, Laura J.
Hiramatsu, Daichi
Hosseinzadeh, Griffin
Laskar, Tanmoy
Bravo, Tomás E. Müller
Patton, Locke
Terreran, Giacomo
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

AT 2018hyz (=ASASSN-18zj) is a tidal disruption event (TDE) located in the nucleus of a quiescent E+A galaxy at a redshift of $z = 0.04573$, first detected by the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN). We present optical+UV photometry of the transient, as well as an X-ray spectrum and radio upper limits. The bolometric light curve of AT 2018hyz is comparable to other known TDEs and declines at a rate consistent with a $t^{-5/3}$ at early times, emitting a total radiated energy of $E = 9\times10^{50}$ erg. An excess bump appears in the UV light curve about 50 days after bolometric peak, followed by a flattening beyond 250 days. The light curve shows an excess bump in the UV about 50 days after bolometric peak lasting for at least 100 days, which may be related to an outflow. We detect a constant X-ray source present for at least 86 days. The X-ray spectrum shows a total unabsorbed flux of $\sim 4\times10^{-14}$ erg cm$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$ and is best fit by a blackbody plus power-law model with a photon index of $\Gamma = 0.8$. A thermal X-ray model is unable to account for photons $> 1$ keV, while the radio non-detection favors inverse-Compton scattering rather than a jet for the non-thermal component. We model the optical and UV light curves using the Modular Open-Source Fitter for Transients (MOSFiT) and find a best fit for a black hole of $5.2\times10^6$ M$_\odot$ partially disrupting a $0.1$ M$_\odot$ star (stripping a mass of $\sim 0.01$ M$_\odot$ for the inferred impact parameter, $\beta=0.6$). The low optical depth implied by the small debris mass may explain how we are able to see hydrogen emission with disk-like line profiles in the spectra of AT 2018hyz (see our companion paper, Short et al.~2020).<br />Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, published in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2003.05469
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa2099