Science with a wide-field UV transient explorer
I. Sagiv, A. Gal-Yam, E. O. Ofek, E. Waxman, O. Aharonson, E. Nakar,, D. Maoz, B. Trakhtenbrot, S. R. Kulkarni, E. S. Phinney, J. Topaz, C., Beichman, J. Murthy, S. P. Worden

TL;DR
A wide-field UV transient explorer could significantly advance our understanding of explosive stellar events, black hole interactions, and variable objects by providing early UV observations, complementing existing multi-messenger astronomy efforts.
Contribution
This paper highlights the scientific potential of a proposed wide-field UV survey mission, ULTRASAT, for studying transient phenomena and variable objects.
Findings
Can measure early UV emission from hundreds of supernovae
Detects UV signals from tens of tidal disruption events
Enables rate measurements of black hole-star interactions
Abstract
The time-variable electromagnetic sky has been well-explored at a wide range of wavelengths. Numerous high-energy space missions take advantage of the dark Gamma-ray and X-ray sky and utilize very wide field detectors to provide almost continuous monitoring of the entire celestial sphere. In visible light, new wide-field ground-based surveys cover wide patches of sky with ever decreasing cadence, progressing from monthly-weekly time scale surveys to sub-night sampling. In the radio, new powerful instrumentation offers unprecedented sensitivity over wide fields of view, with pathfinder experiments for even more ambitious programs underway. In contrast, the ultra-violet (UV) variable sky is relatively poorly explored, even though it offers exciting scientific prospects. Here, we review the potential scientific impact of a wide-field UV survey on the study of explosive and other transient…
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