This volume provides an overview of the fast-developing field of tidal
disruption events. For several decades, astronomers speculated that a
hapless star could wander too close to a massive black hole and be torn
apart by tidal forces. Yet it is only with the recent advent of
wide-field transient surveys that such events have been detected.
Written by a team of prominent researchers, the chapters detail the
discoveries made so far in this burgeoning field of study across the
entire electromagnetic spectrum, from gamma-rays through X-rays,
ultra-violet, optical, infrared, and radio. In addition, they show how
tidal disruption events can be used to study the properties of otherwise
undetectable supermassive black holes; the populations and dynamics of
stars in galactic nuclei; the physics of black hole accretion, including
the potential to detect relativistic effects near a SMBH; and the
physics of (radio) jet formation and evolution in a pristine
environment.
Finally, the book outlines important outstanding questions about TDEs.
With more than 100 color images, the volume will be useful to
researchers and others interested in learning more about this promising
area of astrophysics.
Previously published in Space Science Reviews in the Topical
Collection "The Tidal Disruption of Stars by Massive Black Holes"