Long Term Spectral Evolution of Tidal Disruption Candidates Selected by Strong Coronal Lines
Chenwei Yang, Tinggui Wang, Gary Ferland, Weimin Yuan, Hongyan Zhou,, Peng Jiang

TL;DR
This study investigates long-term spectral changes in galaxies with extreme coronal lines, identifying tidal disruption events through fading lines, flux variations, and broad line evolution, revealing insights into galactic nuclei environments over a decade.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed long-term spectral analysis of TDE candidates with coronal line variability, highlighting the persistence of echo signatures and gas environment diagnostics.
Findings
Coronal lines fade within 5-9 years in TDE candidates.
Strong UV/soft X-ray flares cause observable spectral echoes.
Broad lines from outflows diminish over several years.
Abstract
We present results of follow-up optical spectroscopic observations of seven rare, extreme coronal line emitting galaxies reported by Wang et al. (2012) with Multi-Mirror Telescope (MMT). Large variations in coronal lines are found in four objects, making them strong candidates of tidal disruption events (TDE). For the four TDE candidates, all the coronal lines with ionization status higher than [Fe VII] disappear within 5-9 years. The [Fe VII] faded by a factor of about five in one object (J0952+2143) within 4 years, whereas emerged in other two without them previously. A strong increment in the [O III] flux is observed, shifting the line ratios towards the loci of active galactic nucleus on the BPT diagrams. Surprisingly, we detect a non-canonical [O III]5007/[O III]4959 2 in two objects, indicating a large column density of O and thus probably optical thick gas. This also…
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