Temporal Variation of the Coronal Radius Parameter in a Jetted Tidal Disruption Event: Swift J1644+57

Abstract

Tidal Disruption Events are exotic astrophysical phenomena where matter from a star or the interstellar medium is captured by a supermassive black hole. The process liberates enormous energy, within a few months to a year timescale, enough to detect dormant black holes in near as well as the farthest galaxies. We revisit the long-term spectral variabilities associated with the jetted Tidal Disruption Event ~by exploring the archival X-ray data obtained with Swift/XRT and XMM-Newton observatories. Our analysis reveals that the spectral indices decrease non-monotonically as ~evolves with time. We also find that the soft (0.3-1.5 keV) and hard (1.5-10 keV) X-ray photon counts are highly correlated with a maximum correlation coefficient of 0.95 and peak at zero lag. Moreover, the soft and hard band variabilities obtained from XMM-Newton observations are highly correlated with a Pearson cross-correlation coefficient of 0.96. This indicates that the soft and hard X-ray photons are emitted from the same site, which is most likely a Compton cloud, i.e., the corona. Assuming the hard X-ray photons originate from the corona, we find that the coronal parameter undergoes rapid expansion during the early phases when accompanied by a relativistic jet launching and subsequently evolves toward a state of saturation with minor fluctuations in the latter stages. The temporal variation of the coronal radius parameter (Rcor) is consistent with a simple theoretical conjecture. We also discuss the application of our analytical outcomes to other jetted and non-jetted tidal disruption events.

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