The connection between the UV/optical and X-ray emission in the neutron star low-mass X-ray binary Aql X-1

ArXiv 2001.09903 (2020)

Authors:

E López-Navas, N Degenaar, AS Parikh, JV Hernández Santisteban, J van den Eijnden

The lowest of the low: discovery of SN 2019gsc and the nature of faint Iax supernovae

(2020)

Authors:

Shubham Srivastav, Stephen J Smartt, Giorgos Leloudas, Mark E Huber, Ken Chambers, Daniele B Malesani, Jens Hjorth, James H Gillanders, A Schultz, Stuart A Sim, Katie Auchettl, Johan PU Fynbo, Christa Gall, Owen R McBrien, Armin Rest, Ken W Smith, Radoslaw Wojtak, David R Young

The spectral evolution of disc dominated tidal disruption events

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 492:4 (2020) 5655-5674

Authors:

Andrew Mummery, Steven A Balbus

Abstract:

We perform a detailed numerical and analytical study of the properties of observed light curves from relativistic thin discs, focussing on observational bands most appropriate for comparison with tidal disruption events (TDEs). We make use of asymptotic expansion techniques applied to the spectral emission integral, using time-dependent disc temperature profiles appropriate for solutions of the relativistic thin disc equation. Rather than a power law associated with bolometric disc emission L ∼ t−n, the observed X-ray flux from disc-dominated TDEs will typically have the form of a power law multiplied by an exponential (see equation 91). While precise details are somewhat dependent on the nature of the ISCO stress and disc-observer orientational angle, the general form of the time-dependent flux is robust and insensitive to the exact disc temperature profile. We present numerical fits to the UV and X-ray light curves of ASASSN-14li, a particularly well observed TDE. This modelling incorporates strong gravity optics. The full 900 d of ASASSN-14li X-ray observations are very well fit by a simple relativistic disc model, significantly improving upon previous work. The same underlying model also fits the final 1000 d of ASASSN-14li observations in three different UV bandpasses. Finally, we demonstrate that the analytic formulae reproduce the properties of full numerical modelling at both UV and X-ray wavelengths with great fidelity.

A spectroscopic, photometric, polarimetric and radio study of the eclipsing polar UZ Fornacis: the first simultaneous SALT and MeerKAT observations

(2020)

Authors:

Zwidofhelangani N Khangale, Stephen B Potter, Patrick A Woudt, David AH Buckley, Andrey N Semena, Enrico J Kotze, Danièl N Groenewald, Dante M Hewitt, Margaretha L Pretorius, Rob P Fender, Paul Groot, Steven Bloemen, Marc Klein-Wolt, Elmar Körding, Rudolf Le Poole, Vanessa A McBride, Lee Townsend, Kerry Paterson, Danielle LA Pieterse, Paul M Vreeswijk

Stratified disc wind models for the AGN broad-line region: ultraviolet, optical and X-ray properties

ArXiv 2001.03625 (2020)

Authors:

James H Matthews, Christian Knigge, Nick Higginbottom, Knox S Long, Stuart A Sim, Samuel W Mangham, Edward J Parkinson, Henrietta A Hewitt