A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Optical polarization from colliding stellar stream shocks in a tidal disruption event




AuthorsLiodakis I., Koljonen K.I.I., Blinov D., Lindfors E., Alexander K.D., Hovatta T., Berton M., Hajela A., Jormanainen J., Kouroumpatzakis K., Mandarakas N., Nilsson K.

PublisherAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science

Publication year2023

JournalScience

Journal name in sourceScience (New York, N.Y.)

Volume380

Issue6645

First page 656

Last page658

eISSN1095-9203

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1126/science.abj9570(external)

Web address https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abj9570(external)

Preprint addresshttps://arxiv.org/abs/2208.14465(external)


Abstract

A tidal disruption event (TDE) occurs when a supermassive black hole rips apart a passing star. Part of the stellar material falls toward the black hole, forming an accretion disk that in some cases launches a relativistic jet. We performed optical polarimetry observations of a TDE, AT 2020mot. We find a peak linear polarization degree of 25 ± 4%, consistent with highly polarized synchrotron radiation, as is typically observed from relativistic jets. However, our radio observations, taken up to 8 months after the optical peak, do not detect the corresponding radio emission expected from a relativistic jet. We suggest that the linearly polarized optical emission instead arises from shocks that occur during accretion disk formation, as the stream of stellar material collides with itself.



Last updated on 2025-27-03 at 21:50