2023A&A...669A..75L


Query : 2023A&A...669A..75L

2023A&A...669A..75L - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 669A, 75 (2023/1-1)

Deciphering the extreme X-ray variability of the nuclear transient eRASSt J045650.3-203750 A likely repeating partial tidal disruption event.

LIU Z., MALYALI A., KRUMPE M., HOMAN D., GOODWIN A.J., GROTOVA I., KAWKA A., RAU A., MERLONI A., ANDERSON G.E., MILLER-JONES J.C.A., MARKOWITZ A.G., CIROI S., DI MILLE F., SCHRAMM M., TANG S., BUCKLEY D.A.H., GROMADZKI M., JIN C. and BUCHNER J.

Abstract (from CDS):


Context. During its all-sky survey, the extended ROentgen Survey with an Imaging Telescope Array (eROSITA) on board the Spectrum-Roentgen-Gamma (SRG) observatory has uncovered a growing number of X-ray transients associated with the nuclei of quiescent galaxies. Benefitting from its large field of view and excellent sensitivity, the eROSITA window into time-domain X-ray astrophysics yields a valuable sample of X-ray selected nuclear transients. Multi-wavelength follow-up enables us to gain new insights into understanding the nature and emission mechanism of these phenomena.
Aims. We present the results of a detailed multi-wavelength analysis of an exceptional repeating X-ray nuclear transient, eRASSt J045650.3-203750 (hereafter J0456-20), uncovered by SRG/eROSITA in a quiescent galaxy at a redshift of z ∼ 0.077. We aim to understand the radiation mechanism at different luminosity states of J0456-20, and provide further evidence that similar accretion processes are at work for black hole accretion systems at different black hole mass scales.
Methods. We describe our temporal analysis, which addressed both the long- and short-term variability of J0456-20. A detailed X-ray spectral analysis was performed to investigate the X-ray emission mechanism.
Results. Our main findings are that (1) J0456-20 cycles through four distinctive phases defined based on its X-ray variability: an X-ray rising phase leading to an X-ray plateau phase that lasts for abouttwo months. This is terminated by a rapid X-ray flux drop phase during which the X-ray flux can drop drastically by more than a factor of 100 within one week, followed by an X-ray faint state for about two months before the X-ray rising phase starts again. (2) The X-ray spectra are generally soft in the rising phase, with a photon index ≳3.0, and they become harder as the X-ray flux increases. There is evidence of a multi-colour disk with a temperature of Tin ∼ 70 eV in the inner region at the beginning of the X-ray rising phase. The high-quality XMM-Newton data suggest that a warm and hot corona might cause the X-ray emission through inverse Comptonisation of soft disk seed photons during the plateau phase and at the bright end of the rising phase. (3) J0456-20 shows only moderate UV variability and no significant optical variability above the host galaxy level. Optical spectra taken at different X-ray phases are constant in time and consistent with a typical quiescent galaxy with no indication of emission lines. (4) Radio emission is (as yet) only detected in the X-ray plateau phase and rapidly declines on a timescale of two weeks.
Conclusions. J0456-20 is likely a repeating nuclear transient with a tentative recurrence time of ∼223 days. It is a new member of this rare class. We discuss several possibilities to explain the observational properties of J0456-20. We currently favour a repeating partial tidal disruption event as the most likely scenario. The long-term X-ray evolution is explained as a transition between a thermal disk-dominated soft state and a steep power-law state. This implies that the corona can be formed within a few months and is destroyed within a few weeks.

Abstract Copyright: © The Authors 2023

Journal keyword(s): X-rays: individuals: eRASSt J045650.3-203750 - accretion, accretion disks - galaxies: nuclei - black hole physics

Status at CDS : Examining the need for a new acronym.

Simbad objects: 28

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Number of rows : 28
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 2dFGRS TGS564Z081 Sy2 01 19 08.6635573080 -34 11 30.527946780   16.226   15.275   ~ 91 0
2 eRASSU J023147.2-102010 X 02 31 47.260 -10 20 10.31           ~ 31 0
3 eRASSU J023448.9-441931 X 02 34 48.970 -44 19 31.65           ~ 30 0
4 AT 2021ehb ev 03 07 47.806 +40 18 40.57           ~ 20 0
5 CPD-69 177 WD* 03 10 31.0195960176 -68 36 03.380768388 10.757 11.413 11.394 11.47 11.558 DA3.0 264 0
6 eRASSt J045650.3-203750 X 04 56 50.3 -20 37 50           ~ 9 0
7 QSO J0457-2324 QSO 04 57 03.1791422424 -23 24 52.021129572   18.85 18.5 16.56   ~ 396 1
8 ESO 253-3 Sy2 05 25 18.058 -46 00 21.36 15.95 15.10 14.77 13.95   ~ 65 0
9 ASASSN -14ko ev 05 25 18.13 -46 00 20.3           SNIIn 38 0
10 CD-34 6792 PM* 10 32 13.6185546336 -35 37 41.711776068   12.84 11.84     F:wl: 149 0
11 NGC 3599 GiP 11 15 26.9494646448 +18 06 37.428503940   13.0       ~ 208 0
12 IC 3599 Sy1 12 37 41.1939398400 +26 42 27.484266888   15.7 16.5     ~ 178 0
13 WG 22 WD* 12 38 49.7811220835 -49 48 00.219515411   14.14 13.96     DA4.2 228 0
14 LEDA 43234 AG? 12 48 15.2253025968 +17 46 26.475426228   16.5       ~ 264 0
15 2MASX J13020015+2746579 AGN 13 02 00.1383745104 +27 46 57.854731080   15.4       ~ 111 0
16 NGC 5905 H2G 15 15 23.3280793632 +55 31 01.926808032   13.6       ~ 273 1
17 CD-38 10980 WD* 16 23 33.8380498896 -39 13 46.161043572 9.916 10.885 11.029 10.936 10.841 DA2 483 0
18 X Nor X-1 LXB 16 34 01.610 -47 23 34.80           ~ 516 0
19 GRB 110328A gB 16 44 49 +57 34.9           ~ 450 0
20 V* V1033 Sco HXB 16 54 00.137 -39 50 44.90   15.20 14.2 16.14   F5IV 1886 1
21 NAME XTE J17464-3213 LXB 17 46 15.59637 -32 14 00.8600           ~ 744 0
22 Granat 1915+105 HXB 19 15 11.55576 +10 56 44.9052           ~ 2627 0
23 2MASX J19271951+6533539 Sy1 19 27 19.5393064368 +65 33 54.335877408     15.4     ~ 90 0
24 ICRF J193925.0-634245 Sy2 19 39 25.0245304992 -63 42 45.640373400   18.87 18.37 17.64   ~ 1225 1
25 ASASSN -15lh ev 22 02 15.4 -61 39 34           ~ 165 1
26 AT 2018fyk ev 22 50 16.10 -44 51 53.5           ~ 66 0
27 LP 877-23 PM* 22 52 41.0353986762 -20 35 32.994432457   13.02 11.90     ~ 113 0
28 NGC 7589 Sy1 23 18 15.6790109856 +00 15 40.267016028   15.01 17.01     ~ 91 3

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