NuSTAR Discovery of Dead Quasar Engine in Arp 187
Kohei Ichikawa, Taiki Kawamuro, Megumi Shidatsu, Claudio Ricci,, Hyun-Jin Bae, Kenta Matsuoka, Jaejin Shin, Yoshiki Toba, Junko Ueda,, Yoshihiro Ueda

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a nearby galaxy Arp 187 hosting a 'dead' quasar, with evidence of a rapid luminosity decline by over 1000 times within 10,000 years, suggesting a sudden shutdown of the central engine.
Contribution
It provides the first direct observational constraint on a quasar experiencing an extremely rapid luminosity decline, proposing possible mechanisms for such rapid accretion shutdown.
Findings
Luminosity decline by a factor of >1000 within 10^4 years.
Upper bound on current X-ray luminosity indicating inactivity.
Possible scenarios include tidal disruption or gas depletion mechanisms.
Abstract
Recent active galactic nucleus (AGN) and quasar surveys have revealed a population showing rapid AGN luminosity variability by a factor of . Here we present the most drastic AGN luminosity decline by a factor of constrained by a NuSTAR X-ray observation of the nearby galaxy Arp 187, which is a promising "dead" quasar whose current activity seems quiet but whose past activity of erg s is still observable at a large scale by its light echo. The obtained upper bound of the X-ray luminosity is , corresponding to , indicating an inactive central engine. Even if a putative torus model with cm is assumed, the strong upper-bound still holds with $\log (L_{\rm 2-10 keV}/{\rm erg}…
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