Abstract
On 2011 August 11, INTEGRAL discovered the hard X-ray source IGR J17361-4441 near the centre of the globular cluster NGC 6388. Follow-up observations with Chandra showed the position of the transientwas inconsistent with the cluster dynamical centre, and thus not related to its possible intermediate mass black hole. The source showed a peculiar hard spectrum (g{cyrillic} ≈ 0.8) and no evidence of QPOs, pulsations, type-I bursts, or radio emission. Based on its peak luminosity, IGR J17361-4441 was classified as a very faint X-ray transient, and most likely a low-mass X-ray binary. We re-analysed 200 d of Swift/XRT observations, covering the whole outburst of IGR J17361-4441 and find a t-5/3 trend evident in the light curve, and a thermal emission component that does not evolve significantly with time. We investigate whether this source could be a tidal disruption event, and for certain assumptions find an accretion efficiency ε ≈ 3.5 × 10-4(MCh/M) consistent with a massive white dwarf, and a disrupted minor body mass Mmb ≈ 1.9 × 1027(M/MCh) g in the terrestrial-icy planet regime. These numbers yield an inner disc temperature of the order kTin ≈ 0.04 keV, consistent with the blackbody temperature of kTin ≈ 0.08 keV estimated by spectral fitting. Although the density of white dwarfs and the number of free-floating planets are uncertain, we estimate the rate of planetary tidal disruptions in NGC 6388 to be in the range 3 × 10-6-3 × 10-4 yr-1. Averaged over the MilkyWay globular clusters, the upper limit value corresponds to 0.05 yr-1, consistent with the observation of a single event by INTEGRAL and Swift.
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Santo, M. D., Nucita, A. A., Lodato, G., Manni, L., Paolis, F. D., Farihi, J., … Segreto, A. (2014). The puzzling source IGR J17361-4441 in NGC 6388: A possible planetary tidal disruption event. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 444(1), 93–101. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stu1436
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