Abstract

A star completely destroyed in a tidal disruption event (TDE) ignites a luminous flare that is powered by the fallback of tidally stripped debris to a supermassive black hole (SMBH) of mass M •. We analyze two estimates for the peak fallback rate in a TDE, one being the “frozen-in” model, which predicts a strong dependence of the time to peak fallback rate, t peak, on both stellar mass and age, with 15 days ≲ t peak ≲ 10 yr for main sequence stars with masses 0.2 ≤ M ⋆/M ⊙ ≤ 5 and M • = 106 M ⊙. The second estimate, which postulates that the star is completely destroyed when tides dominate the maximum stellar self-gravity, predicts that t peak is very weakly dependent on stellar type, with tpeak=23.2±4.0daysM•/106M⊙1/2 for 0.2 ≤ M ⋆/M ⊙ ≤ 5, while tpeak=29.8±3.6daysM•/106M⊙1/2 for a Kroupa initial mass function truncated at 1.5M ⊙. This second estimate also agrees closely with hydrodynamical simulations, while the frozen-in model is discrepant by orders of magnitude. We conclude that (1) the time to peak luminosity in complete TDEs is almost exclusively determined by SMBH mass, and (2) massive-star TDEs power the largest accretion luminosities. Consequently, (a) decades-long extra-galactic outbursts cannot be powered by complete TDEs, including massive-star disruptions, and (b) the most highly super-Eddington TDEs are powered by the complete disruption of massive stars, which—if responsible for producing jetted TDEs—would explain the rarity of jetted TDEs and their preference for young and star-forming host galaxies.

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