Characterizing Some Gaia Alerts with LAMOST and SDSS
Z. Huo, M. Dennefeld, X. Liu, T. Pursimo, T. Zhang

TL;DR
This study cross-matched Gaia Alerts with LAMOST and SDSS spectroscopic data to identify the nature of variable objects, revealing many as stars, galaxies, and quasars, including some changing look quasars and supernovae.
Contribution
It provides a systematic comparison of Gaia Alerts with ground-based spectra, identifying the physical nature of transient and variable sources and highlighting the potential of multi-epoch spectroscopy.
Findings
Most Gaia Alerts associated with stars are CVs.
Many galaxy-associated Alerts are emission-line galaxies, likely supernovae.
Several quasars show spectral changes indicating changing look quasars.
Abstract
Gaia is regularly producing Alerts on objects where photometric variability has been detected. The physical nature of these objects has often to be determined with the complementary observations from ground-based facilities. We have compared the list of Gaia Alerts (until 20181101) with archival LAMOST and SDSS spectroscopic data. The date of the ground-based observation rarely corresponds to the date of the Alert, but this allows at least the identification of the source if it is persistent, or the host galaxy if the object was only transient like a supernova. A list of Gaia Nuclear Transients from Kostrzewa-Rutkowska et al. (2018) has been included in this search also. We found 26 Gaia Alerts with spectra in LAMOST+SDSS labelled as stars (12 with multi-epoch spectra). A majority of them are CVs. Similarly 206 Gaia Alerts have associated spectra labelled as galaxies (49 with…
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