Radio constraint on outflows from tidal disruption events

Tatsuya Matsumoto*, Tsvi Piran

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

Radio flares from tidal disruption events (TDEs) are generally interpreted as synchrotron emission arising from the interaction of an outflow with the surrounding circumnuclear medium (CNM). We generalize the common equipartition analysis to be applicable in cases lacking a clear spectral peak or even with just an upper limit. We show that, for detected events, there is a lower limit on the combination of the outflow's velocity v and solid angle , va(with a 0.5). Considering several possible outflow components accompanying TDEs, we find that: isotropic outflows such as disc winds with v\sim 104\, \rm km\, s{-1} and = 4can easily produce the observed flares; the bow shock of the unbound debris has a wedge-like geometry and it must be geometrically thick with 1. A fraction of its mass (0.01 M) has to move at v \gtrsim 2 \times 10^4\, \rm km\, s{-1}; Conical Newtonian outflows such as jets can also be a radio source but both their velocity and the CNM density should be larger than those of isotropic winds by a factor of (/4)-0.5. Our limits on the CNM densities are typically 30-100 times larger than those found by previous analysis that ignored non-relativistic electrons. We also find that late (a few years after the TDE) radio upper limits rule out energetic, {\sim}10{51\!-\!52}\, \rm erg, relativistic jets like the one observed in TDE Sw J1644+57, implying that such jets are rare.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4196-4210
Number of pages15
JournalMonthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Volume507
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Nov 2021

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