http://arxiv.org/abs/2212.10331
We present a review of the topics of X-ray stellar tidal disruption events (TDEs) and changing-look active galactic nuclei (AGN). Stars approaching a supermassive black hole (SMBH) can be tidally disrupted and accreted. TDEs were first discovered in the X-ray regime and appear as luminous, giant-amplitude flares from inactive galaxies. The early X-ray observations with ROSAT also established the extreme X-ray spectral softness of these events with temperatures of order 50-100 eV that continues to be seen in the majority of more recently identified events. While the majority of X-ray TDEs has been identified from {\it inactive} galaxies and some showed the highest amplitudes of variability recorded from galaxy cores (amplitudes exceeding factors of 1000–6000), a small fraction of {\it active} galactic nuclei (AGN) has been found to be highly variable as well. In AGN, this so-called changing-look phenomenon often comes with a strong change in the optical broad emission lines, leading to Seyfert-type changes between class 1 and class 2. These two forms of activity represent the extremes of variability among active and quiescent galaxies, and have opened up a new window on understanding accretion physics under extreme conditions. Finally, we introduce the term “frozen-look AGN” to describe systems that show constant line emission despite strong/dramatic changes in the observed ionizing continuum. These systems are best explained by strong changes of absorption along our line-of-sight.
S. Komossa and D. Grupe
Wed, 21 Dec 22
30/81
Comments: Invited review, XMM-Newton Science Workshop 2022 on Black Hole Accretion, to appear in AN
You must be logged in to post a comment.