Rapid Accretion State Transitions following the Tidal Disruption Event AT2018fyk

Open Access
Authors
  • P. Uttley
  • K.C. Gendreau
  • R. Remillard
  • Z. Arzoumanian
  • M. Löwenstein
  • A. Chiti
Publication date 10-05-2021
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Article number 151
Volume | Issue number 912 | 2
Number of pages 18
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Following a tidal disruption event (TDE), the accretion rate can evolve from quiescent to near-Eddington levels and back over timescales of months to years. This provides a unique opportunity to study the formation and evolution of the accretion flow around supermassive black holes (SMBHs). We present 2 yr of multiwavelength monitoring observations of the TDE AT2018fyk at X-ray, UV, optical, and radio wavelengths. We identify three distinct accretion states and two state transitions between them. These appear remarkably similar to the behavior of stellar-mass black holes in outburst. The X-ray spectral properties show a transition from a soft (thermal-dominated) to a hard (power-law-dominated) spectral state around Lbol ∼ few × 10−2 LEdd and the strengthening of the corona over time ∼100–200 days after the UV/optical peak. Contemporaneously, the spectral energy distribution (in particular, the UV to X-ray spectral slope αox) shows a pronounced softening as the outburst progresses. The X-ray timing properties also show a marked change, initially dominated by variability at long (>day) timescales, while a high-frequency (∼10−3 Hz) component emerges after the transition into the hard state. At late times (∼500 days after peak), a second accretion state transition occurs, from the hard into the quiescent state, as identified by the sudden collapse of the bolometric (X-ray+UV) emission to levels below 10−3.4 LEdd. Our findings illustrate that TDEs can be used to study the scale (in)variance of accretion processes in individual SMBHs. Consequently, they provide a new avenue to study accretion states over seven orders of magnitude in black hole mass, removing limitations inherent to commonly used ensemble studies.
Document type Article
Language English
Related dataset Dataset for: Rapid accretion state transitions following the tidal disruption event AT2018fyk
Published at https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2101.04692 https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/abf5e2
Other links https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2021ApJ...912..151W/abstract
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