The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2024)

Ubiquitous Late Radio Emission from Tidal Disruption Events

  • Y. Cendes,
  • E. Berger,
  • K. D. Alexander,
  • R. Chornock,
  • R. Margutti,
  • B. Metzger,
  • M. H. Wieringa,
  • M. F. Bietenholz,
  • A. Hajela,
  • T. Laskar,
  • M. C. Stroh,
  • G. Terreran

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad5541
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 971, no. 2
p. 185

Abstract

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We present radio observations of 23 optically discovered tidal disruption events (TDEs) on timescales of ∼500–3200 days postdiscovery. We detect nine new TDEs that did not have detectable radio emission at earlier times, indicating a late-time brightening after several hundred (and up to 2300) days; an additional seven TDEs exhibit radio emission whose origin is ambiguous or may be attributed to the host galaxy or an active galactic nucleus. We also report a new rising component in one TDE previously detected in the radio at ∼10 ^3 days. While the radio emission in some of the detected TDEs peaked on a timescale ≈2–4 yr, over half of the sample still show rising emission. The range of luminosities for the sample is ∼10 ^37 –10 ^39 erg s ^−1 , about 2 orders of magnitude below the radio luminosity of the relativistic TDE Sw J1644+57. Our data set indicates ∼40% of all optical TDEs are detected in radio hundreds to thousands of days after discovery, and that this is probably more common than early radio emission peaking at ∼10 ^2 days. Using an equipartition analysis, we find evidence for a delayed launch of the radio-emitting outflows, with delay timescales of ∼500–2000 days, inferred velocities of ≈0.02–0.15 c , and kinetic energies of ∼10 ^47 –10 ^49 erg. We rule out off-axis relativistic jets as a viable explanation for this population, and conclude delayed outflows are a more likely explanation, possibly from delayed disk formation. We conclude late radio emission marks a fairly ubiquitous but heretofore overlooked phase of TDE evolution.

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