4.7 Article

Ultraviolet detection of the tidal disruption of a star by a supermassive black hole

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 653, Issue 1, Pages L25-L28

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/509918

Keywords

galaxies : nuclei; ultraviolet : galaxies

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A supermassive black hole in the nucleus of a galaxy will be revealed when a star passes close enough to be torn apart by tidal forces and a flare of radiation is emitted by the stream of stellar debris that plunges into the black hole. Since common active galactic nuclei have accreting black holes that can also produce flares, a convincing demonstration that a stellar tidal disruption has occurred generally begins with a normal galaxy that has no evidence of prior nuclear activity. Here we,report a luminous UV flare from an elliptical galaxy at z=0.37 in the Groth field of the GALEX Deep Imaging Survey that has no evidence of a Seyfert nucleus from optical spectroscopy and X-ray imaging obtained during the flare. Multiwavelength data collected at the time of the event, and for 2 years following, allow us to constrain, for the first time, the spectral energy distribution of a candidate tidal disruption flare from optical through X-rays. The luminosity and temperature of the radiation and the decay curve of the flare are in excellent agreement with theoretical predictions for the tidal disruption of a star, and provide the strongest empirical evidence for a stellar disruption event to date.

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