A Multiwavelength Study of the Relativistic Tidal Disruption Candidate Sw J2058+05 at Late Times
Dheeraj R. Pasham (NASA/GSFC & JSI), S. Bradley Cenko (NASA/GSFC &, JSI), Andrew J. Levan, Geoffrey C. Bower, Assaf Horesh, Gregory C. Brown,, Stephen Dolan, Klaas Wiersema, Alexei V. Filippenko, Andrew S. Fruchter,, Jochen Greiner, Rebekah A. Hounsell, Paul T. O'Brien

TL;DR
This study presents a comprehensive multiwavelength analysis of the relativistic tidal disruption candidate Sw J2058+05 over three years, revealing its accretion behavior, location, and spectral evolution, and comparing it with Sw J1644+57.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed long-term multiwavelength observational analysis of Sw J2058+05, confirming its nature as a tidal disruption event similar to Sw J1644+57.
Findings
X-ray light curve shows a decay similar to Sw J1644+57
Rapid X-ray variability indicates emission close to the black hole
Source location coincides with galaxy center within 400 pc
Abstract
We report a multiwavelength (X-ray, ultraviolet/optical/infrared, radio) analysis of the relativistic tidal disruption event candidate Sw J2058+05 from 3 months to 3 yr post-discovery in order to study its properties and compare its behavior with that of Sw J1644+57. Our main results are as follows. (1) The long-term X-ray light curve of Sw J2058+05 shows a remarkably similar trend to that of Sw J1644+57. After a prolonged power-law decay, the X-ray flux drops off rapidly by a factor of within a span of / 0.95. Associating this sudden decline with the transition from super-Eddington to sub-Eddington accretion, we estimate the black hole mass to be in the range of M. (2) We detect rapid ( s) X-ray variability before the dropoff, suggesting that, even at late times, the X-rays originate from close to the black hole…
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