IIA Institutional Repository

Dust-obscured radio-emitting tidal disruption event coincident with a high-energy neutrino event

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Zhou, Tianyao
dc.contributor.author Shu, Xinwen
dc.contributor.author Mou, Guobin
dc.contributor.author Yang, Lei
dc.contributor.author Sun, Luming
dc.contributor.author Peng, Fangkun
dc.contributor.author Zhang, Fabao
dc.contributor.author Ding, Hucheng
dc.contributor.author Jiang, Ning
dc.contributor.author Wang, Tinggui
dc.contributor.author Chandola, Yogesh
dc.contributor.author Liu, Daizhong
dc.contributor.author Dou, L
dc.contributor.author Wang, Yibo
dc.contributor.author Wang, Jianguo
dc.contributor.author Wu, Zhongzu
dc.contributor.author Yang, Chenwei
dc.date.accessioned 2026-04-22T04:13:18Z
dc.date.available 2026-04-22T04:13:18Z
dc.date.issued 2026-02-15
dc.identifier.citation Physical Review D, Vol. 113, No. 4, 043046 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 2470-0010
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8907
dc.description Open Access en_US
dc.description.abstract Despite the growing number of high-energy neutrinos (TeV–PeV) detected by IceCube, their astrophysical origins remain largely unidentified. Recent observations have linked a few tidal disruption events (TDEs) to the production of high-energy neutrino emission, all of which display dust-reprocessed infrared flares, indicating a dust- and gas-rich environment. By cross-matching the neutrino events and a sample of mid-infrared outbursts in nearby galaxies with transient radio flares, we uncover an optically obscured TDE candidate, SDSS J151345.75 þ 311125.2, which shows both spatial and temporal coincidence with the sub-PeV neutrino event IC170514B. Using a standard equipartition analysis of the synchrotron spectral evolution spanning 605 days post mid-infrared discovery, we find a little evolution in the radio-emitting region, with a kinetic energy up to 1051 erg, depending on the outflow geometry and shock acceleration efficiency assumed. High-resolution European VLBI Network imaging reveals a compact radio emission that is unresolved at a scale of < 2.1 pc, with a brightness temperature of Tb > 5 × 106 K, suggesting that the observed late-time radio emission might originate from the interaction between a decelerating outflow and a dense circumnuclear medium. If the association is genuine, the neutrino production is possibly related to the acceleration of protons through pp collisions during the outflow expanding process, implying that the outflow-cloud interaction could provide a physical site with a high-density environment for producing the sub-PeV neutrinos. Such a scenario can be tested with future identifications of radio transients coincident with high-energy neutrinos en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher American Physical Society en_US
dc.relation.uri https://doi.org/10.1103/j8g9-f6hh
dc.rights © 2026 American Physical Society
dc.title Dust-obscured radio-emitting tidal disruption event coincident with a high-energy neutrino event en_US
dc.type Article en_US


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search DSpace


Browse

My Account