A Luminous, Fast Rising UV-Transient Discovered By ROTSE: A Tidal Disruption Event?

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Date

2015-01

Authors

Vinko, Jozsef
Yuan, F.
Quimby, Robert M.
Wheeler, J. Craig
Ramirez-Ruiz, E.
Guillochon, J.
Chatzopoulos, Emmanouil
Marion, G. H.
Akerlof, C.

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Abstract

We present follow-up observations of an optical transient (OT) discovered by ROTSE on 2009 January 21. Photometric monitoring was carried out with ROTSE-IIIb in the optical and Swift in the UV up to +70 days after discovery. The light curve showed a fast rise time of similar to 10 days followed by a steep decline over the next 60 days, which was much faster than that implied by Ni-56-Co-56 radioactive decay. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 10 database contains a faint, red object at the position of the OT, which appears slightly extended. This and other lines of evidence suggest that the OT is of extragalactic origin, and this faint object is likely the host galaxy. A sequence of optical spectra obtained with the 9.2 m Hobby Eberly Telescope between +8 and +45 days after discovery revealed a hot, blue continuum with no visible spectral features. A few weak features that appeared after +30 days probably originated from the underlying host. Fitting synthetic templates to the observed spectrum of the host galaxy revealed a redshift of z = 0.19. At this redshift, the peak magnitude of the OT is close to 22.5, similar to the brightest super-luminous supernovae; however, the lack of identifiable spectral features makes the massive stellar death hypothesis less likely. A more plausible explanation appears to be the tidal disruption of a Sun-like star by the central supermassive black hole. We argue that this transient likely belongs to a class of super-Eddington tidal disruption events.

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Yuan, F., R. M. Quimby, J. C. Wheeler, E. Ramirez-Ruiz, J. Guillochon, E. Chatzopoulos, G. H. Marion, and C. Akerlof. "A Luminous, Fast Rising UV-transient Discovered by ROTSE: A Tidal Disruption Event?." The Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 798, No. 1 (Jan., 2015): 12.