The existence of supermassive black holes lurking in the centers of galaxies
and of stellar binary systems containing a black hole with a few solar masses
has been established beyond reasonable doubt. The idea that black holes of
intermediate masses (∼1000 \msun) may exist in globular star clusters has
gained credence over recent years but no conclusive evidence has been
established yet. An attractive feature of this hypothesis is the potential to
not only disrupt solar-type stars but also compact white dwarf stars. In close
encounters the white dwarfs can be sufficiently compressed to thermonuclearly
explode. The detection of an underluminous thermonuclear explosion accompanied
by a soft, transient X-ray signal would be compelling evidence for the presence
of intermediate mass black holes in stellar clusters. In this paper we focus on
the numerical techniques used to simulate the entire disruption process from
the initial parabolic orbit, over the nuclear energy release during tidal
compression, the subsequent ejection of freshly synthesized material and the
formation process of an accretion disk around the black hole.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, Computer Physics Communications, accepted; movie
can be found at http://www.faculty.iu-bremen.de/srosswog/; reference
correcte