The Discovery and Nature of Optical Transient CSS100217:102913+404220
A.J. Drake, S.G. Djorgovski, A. Mahabal, J. Anderson, R. Roy, V., Mohan, S. Ravindranath, D. Frail, S. Gezari, James D. Neill, L.C. Ho, J.L., Prieto, D. Thompson, J. Thorstensen, M. Wagner, R. Kowalski, J. Chiang, J.E., Grove, F.K. Schinzel, D.L. Wood, L. Carrasco, E. Recillas

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of an extremely luminous optical transient, CSS100217, likely a supernova occurring near an active galactic nucleus, with detailed observations and analysis distinguishing it from other nuclear events.
Contribution
The study presents detailed multi-wavelength observations of CSS100217, providing evidence that it is an exceptionally bright supernova near an AGN, and discusses implications for future transient surveys.
Findings
CSS100217 reached an absolute magnitude of -22.7
The transient had a peak luminosity of 1.3 x 10^45 erg s^-1
The event was likely a luminous type IIn supernova near an AGN nucleus
Abstract
We report on the discovery and observations of the extremely luminous optical transient CSS100217:102913+404220 (CSS100217 hereafter). Spectroscopic observations show this transient was coincident with a galaxy at redshift z=0.147, and reached an apparent magnitude of V ~ 16.3. After correcting for foreground Galactic extinction we determine the absolute magnitude to be M_V =-22.7 approximately 45 days after maximum light. Based on our unfiltered optical photometry the peak optical emission was L = 1.3 x 10^45 erg s^-1, and over a period of 287 rest-frame days had an integrated bolometric luminosity of 1.2 x 10^52 erg. Analysis of the pre-outburst SDSS spectrum of the source shows features consistent with a Narrow-line Seyfert1 (NLS1) galaxy. High-resolution HST and Keck followup observations show the event occurred within 150pc of nucleus of the galaxy, suggesting a possible link to…
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