Abstract

During the tidal disruption of a star by a massive black hole (BH) of mass MBH <~ 10^7 Msun, stellar debris falls back to the BH at a rate well above the Eddington rate. A fraction of this gas is subsequently blown away from the BH, producing an optically bright flare of radiation. We predict the spectra and spectral evolution of tidal disruption events, focusing on the photoionized gas outside this outflow's photosphere. The spectrum will show absorption lines that are strongly blueshifted relative to the host galaxy, very broad (0.01-0.1c), and strongest at UV wavelengths (e.g., C IV, Ly alpha, O VI), lasting ~ 1 month for a 10^6 Msun BH. Meanwhile, supernovae in galactic nuclei are a significant source of confusion in optical surveys for tidal disruption events: we estimate that nuclear Type Ia supernovae are two orders of magnitude more common than tidal disruption events at z ~ 0.1 for ground-based surveys. Nuclear Type II supernovae occur at a comparable rate but can be excluded by pre-selecting red galaxies. Supernova contamination can be reduced to a manageable level using high-resolution follow-up imaging with adaptive optics or the Hubble Space Telescope. Our predictions should help optical transient surveys capitalize on their potential for discovering tidal disruption events.

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