סמינר באסטרונומיה ובאסטרופיזיקה: A Brief Stroll Through Tidal Disruption Events
Prof. Julian H. Krolik, Johns Hopkins University
Zoom: https://tau-ac-il.zoom.us/j/87185167411?pwd=FpTUyIgXaOturzOFSetA6pPVYQilen.1
Abstract:
When stars pass very close to a supermassive black hole, they can be torn apart by the black hole's tidal gravity. The result is a bright flare lasting a few months or more, usually most easily observable in the optical or UV, but sometimes in X-rays or the radio band. The basic theory of these events was sketched out in the 1980s, roughly 20 years before the first events were observed. There are now ~100 cases that are almost certainly events of this sort, and the Rubin Observatory is likely to see thousands more. In this talk, I will review the original theory, compare its predictions to observations, and present new ideas about how these events actually work, many of these ideas overturning widely-held previous expectations.
מארגן הסמינר: ד"ר יהונתן שטרן

