ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
The question of how supermassive black holes (SMBHs) grow over cosmic time is a major puzzle in high-energy astrophysics. One promising approach to this problem is via the study of tidal disruption flares (TDFs). These are transient events resulting from the disruption of stars by quiescent supermassive black holes at centers of galaxies. A meter-class X-ray observatory with a time resolution $sim$ a millisecond and a spectral resolution of a few eV at KeV energies would be revolutionary as it will facilitate high signal to noise spectral-timing studies of several cosmological TDFs. It would open a new era of astrophysics where SMBHs in TDFs at cosmic distances can be studied in similar detail as current studies of much nearer, stellar-mass black hole binaries. Using Athena X-ray observatory as an example, we highlight two specific aspects of spectral-timing analysis of TDFs. (1) Detection of X-ray quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) over a redshift range and using these signal frequencies to constrain the spin evolution of SMBHs, and (2) Time-resolved spectroscopy of outflows/winds to probe super-Eddington accretion. SMBH spin distributions at various redshifts will directly allow us to constrain their primary mode of growth as higher spins are predicted due to spin-up for prolonged accretion-mode growth, while lower spins are expected for growth via mergers due to angular momentum being deposited from random directions. A meter-class X-ray telescope will also be able to characterize relativistic TDFs, viz., SwJ1644+57-like events, out to a redshift greater than 8, i.e., it would facilitate detailed spectral-timing studies of TDFs by the youngest SMBHs in the Universe.
We present the first simulations of the tidal disruption of stars with realistic structures and compositions by massive black holes (BHs). We build stars in the stellar evolution code MESA and simulate their disruption in the 3D adaptive-mesh hydrody
Detections of the tidal disruption flares (TDFs) of stars by supermassive black holes (SMBHs) are rapidly accumulating as optical surveys improve. These detections may provide constraints on SMBH demographics, stellar dynamics, and stellar evolution
Aims: A strong, hard X-ray flare was discovered (IGR J12580+0134) by INTEGRAL in 2011, and is associated to NGC 4845, a Seyfert 2 galaxy never detected at high-energy previously. To understand what happened we observed this event in the X-ray band on
Binary stars that are on close orbits around massive black holes (MBH) such as Sgr A* in the center of the Milky Way are liable to undergo tidal disruption and eject a hypervelocity star. We study the interaction between such a MBH and circular binar
We discuss the central role played by X-ray studies to reconstruct the past history of formation and evolution of supermassive Black Holes (BHs), and the role they played in shaping the properties of their host galaxies. We shortly review the progres