Contribution of Stellar Tidal Disruptions to the X‐Ray Luminosity Function of Active Galaxies
- 20 November 2006
- journal article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 652 (1), 120-125
- https://doi.org/10.1086/508134
Abstract
The luminosity function of active galactic nuclei has been measured down to luminosities ~10^{42} erg/s in the soft and hard X-rays. Some fraction of this activity is associated with the accretion of the material liberated by the tidal disruption of stars by massive black holes. We estimate the contribution to the X-ray luminosity function from the tidal disruption process. While the contribution depends on a number poorly known parameters, it appears that it can account for the majority of X-ray selected AGN with soft or hard X-ray luminosities <~10^{43}-10^{44} erg/s. If this is correct, a picture emerges in which a significant portion of the X-ray luminosity function of AGN is comprised of sources powered by tidal-disruption at the faint end, while the sources at the bright end are powered by non-stellar accretion. Black holes with masses <~2x10^6 Msun could have acquired most of their present mass by an accretion of tidal debris. In view of the considerable theoretical uncertainty concerning the detailed shape of the light curves of tidal disruption events, we focus on power-law luminosity decay (as identified in candidate tidal disruption events), but we also discuss constant accretion rate models.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Cosmic Evolution of Hard X-Ray-selected Active Galactic NucleiThe Astronomical Journal, 2005
- Large-Amplitude X-Ray Outbursts from Galactic Nuclei: A Systematic Survey using [ITAL]ROSAT[/ITAL] Archival DataThe Astronomical Journal, 2002
- Super-Eddington Fluxes from Thin Accretion Disks?The Astrophysical Journal, 2002
- The Luminosity Function of Galaxies in SDSS Commissioning DataThe Astronomical Journal, 2001
- Tidal Disruption of a Solar‐Type Star by a Supermassive Black HoleThe Astrophysical Journal, 2000
- A duty cycle hypothesis for the central engines of LINERsThe Astrophysical Journal, 1995
- The disk accretion of a tidally disrupted star onto a massive black holeThe Astrophysical Journal, 1990
- The stellar distribution around a black hole - Numerical integration of the Fokker-Planck equationThe Astrophysical Journal, 1978
- The star distribution around a massive black hole in a globular cluster. II Unequal star massesThe Astrophysical Journal, 1977
- Star distribution around a massive black hole in a globular clusterThe Astrophysical Journal, 1976