Optical discovery of probable stellar tidal disruption flares
Sjoert van Velzen, Glennys R. Farrar, Suvi Gezari, Nidia Morrell,, Dennis Zaritsky, Linda Ostman, Mathew Smith, Joseph Gelfand, Andrew J. Drake

TL;DR
This study identifies probable stellar tidal disruption flares in non-active galaxies using archival SDSS data, providing evidence for a new class of nuclear transients with distinctive properties.
Contribution
The paper presents the first optical discovery and characterization of candidate stellar tidal disruption events in non-active galaxies, demonstrating a feasible method for large-scale TDE detection.
Findings
Identified two candidate TDEs with characteristic temperatures and luminosities.
Showed these flares are unlikely to be caused by supernovae or AGN activity.
Demonstrated the potential to find hundreds of TDE candidates with high purity.
Abstract
Using archival SDSS multi-epoch imaging data (Stripe 82), we have searched for the tidal disruption of stars by super-massive black holes in non-active galaxies. Two candidate tidal disruption events (TDEs) are identified. They have optical black-body temperatures 2 10^4 K and observed peak luminosities M_g=-18.3 and -20.4; their cooling rates are very low, qualitatively consistent with expectations for tidal disruption flares. Their properties are examined using i) SDSS imaging to compare them to other flares observed in the search, ii) UV emission measured by GALEX and iii) spectra of the hosts and of one of the flares. Our pipeline excludes optically identifiable AGN hosts, and our variability monitoring over 9 years provides strong evidence that these are not flares in hidden AGNs. The spectra and color evolution of the flares are unlike any SN observed to date, their strong…
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