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 IGR J12580+0134 - An extragalactic black hole planet host?

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Edasich
dK star
dK star
Edasich


Number of posts : 2285
Location : Tau Ceti g - Mid Latitudes
Registration date : 2008-06-02

IGR J12580+0134 - An extragalactic black hole planet host? Empty
PostSubject: IGR J12580+0134 - An extragalactic black hole planet host?   IGR J12580+0134 - An extragalactic black hole planet host? Empty16th September 2021, 1:10 pm

Back from 2015 an object partly recalling the movie Interstellar but in a more... catastrophic way.

IGR J12580+0134: The First Tidal Disruption Event with an Off-beam Relativistic Jet
Quote :
Supermassive black holes (SMBHs) can capture and tidally disrupt stars or sub-stellar objects orbiting nearby. The detections of Sw J1644+57-like events suggest that at least some TDEs can launch a relativistic jet beaming towards Earth. A natural expectation would be the existence of TDEs with a relativistic jet beaming away from Earth. The nearby TDE candidate IGR J12580+0134 provides new insights into the jet phenomenon. Combining several constraints, we find that the event invokes a 8-40 Jupiter mass object tidally disrupted by a 3 × 105 − 1.8 × 107M SMBH. Recently, a bright radio transient was discovered by Irwin et al. in association with IGR J12580+0134. We perform detailed modeling of the event based on a numerical jet model previously developed for the radio emission of Sw J1644+57. We find that the radio data of IGR J12580+0134 can be interpreted within an external forward shock model in the Newtonian regime. Using Sw J1644+57 as a template and properly correcting for its luminosity, we argue that the observed X-ray flux in early times is too faint to allow an on-beam relativistic jet unless the Lorentz factor is very small. Rather, the X-ray emission is likely from the disk or corona near the black hole. From various constraints, we find that the data are consistent with an off-beam relativistic jet with a viewing angle θobs≳30o, and an initial Lorentz factor Γj≳ a few.This scenario can readily be tested in the upcoming VLBI observations.
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IGR J12580+0134 - An extragalactic black hole planet host?
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