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      Delayed X-Ray Brightening Accompanied by Variable Ionized Absorption Following a Tidal Disruption Event

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      The Astrophysical Journal
      American Astronomical Society

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          Abstract

          Supermassive black holes can experience super-Eddington peak mass fallback rates following the tidal disruption of a star. The theoretical expectation is that part of the infalling material is expelled by means of an accretion disk wind, whose observational signature includes blueshifted absorption lines of highly ionized species in X-ray spectra. To date, however, only one such ultrafast outflow (UFO) has been reported in the tidal disruption event (TDE) ASASSN–14li. Here we report on the discovery of a transient absorption-like signature in X-ray spectra of the TDE AT2020ksf/Gaia20cjk (at a redshift of z = 0.092), following an X-ray brightening ∼230 days after UV/optical peak. We find that while no statistically significant absorption features are present initially, they appear on a timescale of several days and remain detected up to 770 days after peak. Simple thermal continuum models, combined with a power-law or neutral absorber, do not describe these features well. Adding a partial-covering, low-velocity ionized absorber improves the fit at early times but fails at late times. A high-velocity ( v w ∼ 42,000 km s −1), ionized absorber (UFO) provides a good fit to all data. The few-day timescale of variability is consistent with expectations for a clumpy wind. We discuss several scenarios that could explain the X-ray delay, as well as the potential for larger-scale wind feedback. The serendipitous nature of the discovery could suggest a high incidence of UFOs in TDEs, alleviating some of the tension with theoretical expectations.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                The Astrophysical Journal
                ApJ
                American Astronomical Society
                0004-637X
                1538-4357
                February 29 2024
                March 01 2024
                February 29 2024
                March 01 2024
                : 963
                : 1
                : 75
                Article
                10.3847/1538-4357/ad1878
                288b20c1-8372-459a-9423-2e8a70d9d20f
                © 2024

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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