Discovery and Follow-up of ASASSN-19dj: An X-ray and UV Luminous TDE in an Extreme Post-Starburst Galaxy
Jason T. Hinkle, T. W.-S. Holoien, K. Auchettl, B. J. Shappee, J. M., M. Neustadt, A. V. Payne, J. S. Brown, C. S. Kochanek, K. Z. Stanek, M. J., Graham, M. A. Tucker, A. Do, J. P. Anderson, S. Bose, P. Chen, D. A. Coulter,, G. Dimitriadis, Subo Dong, R. J. Foley, M. E. Huber

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed multiwavelength follow-up of ASASSN-19dj, a luminous TDE in an extreme post-starburst galaxy, revealing unique X-ray and UV behaviors and historical nuclear activity.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multiwavelength observational analysis of a TDE in an extreme post-starburst galaxy, highlighting its unique X-ray and UV evolution.
Findings
X-ray flux increased over an order of magnitude 225 days after peak
Late-time X-ray emission fits a blackbody with radius ~10^12 cm and temperature ~6x10^5 K
Historical nuclear outburst detected 14.5 years prior to TDE
Abstract
We present observations of ASASSN-19dj, a nearby tidal disruption event (TDE) discovered in the post-starburst galaxy KUG 0810+227 by the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN) at a distance of d Mpc. We observed ASASSN-19dj from 21 to 392 d relative to peak ultraviolet (UV)/optical emission using high-cadence, multiwavelength spectroscopy and photometry. From the ASAS-SN -band data, we determine that the TDE began to brighten on 2019 February 6.8 and for the first 16 d the rise was consistent with a flux power-law. ASASSN-19dj peaked in the UV/optical on 2019 March 6.5 (MJD = 58548.5) at a bolometric luminosity of . Initially remaining roughly constant in X-rays and slowly fading in the UV/optical, the X-ray flux increased by over an order of magnitude 225 d after peak, resulting from…
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