PTF10iya: A short-lived, luminous flare from the nuclear region of a star-forming galaxy
S. Bradley Cenko, Joshua S. Bloom, S. R. Kulkarni, Linda E. Strubbe,, Adam A. Miller, Nathaniel R. Butler, Robert M. Quimby, Avishay Gal-Yam, Eran, O. Ofek, Eliot Quataert, Lars Bildsten, Dovi Poznanski, Daniel A. Perley,, Adam N. Morgan, Alexei V. Filippenko, Dale A. Frail

TL;DR
PTF10iya is a luminous, short-lived transient near a galaxy's nucleus, likely caused by a star being tidally disrupted by a supermassive black hole, revealing rapid galaxy activity transitions.
Contribution
This study reports the discovery and detailed characterization of PTF10iya, a transient consistent with a tidal disruption event in a quiescent galaxy, highlighting rapid black hole accretion phenomena.
Findings
Transient lasted about 10 days with high luminosity.
Spectral energy distribution fits a blackbody at 1-2 x 10^4 K.
No evidence of prior active galactic nucleus activity.
Abstract
We present the discovery and characterisation of PTF10iya, a short-lived (dt ~ 10 d, with an optical decay rate of ~ 0.3 mag per d), luminous (M_g ~ -21 mag) transient source found by the Palomar Transient Factory. The ultraviolet/optical spectral energy distribution is reasonably well fit by a blackbody with T ~ 1-2 x 10^4 K and peak bolometric luminosity L_BB ~ 1-5 x 10^44 erg per s (depending on the details of the extinction correction). A comparable amount of energy is radiated in the X-ray band that appears to result from a distinct physical process. The location of PTF10iya is consistent with the nucleus of a star-forming galaxy (z = 0.22405 +/- 0.00006) to within 350 mas (99.7 per cent confidence radius), or a projected distance of less than 1.2 kpc. At first glance, these properties appear reminiscent of the characteristic "big blue bump" seen in the near-ultraviolet spectra of…
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