Mid-InfraRed Outburst in Nearby Galaxies (MIRONG) I: Sample Selection and Characterization
Ning Jiang, Tinggui Wang, Liming Dou, Xinwen Shu, Xueyang Hu, Hui Liu,, Yibo Wang, Lin Yan, Zhenfeng Sheng, Chenwei Yang, Luming Sun, Hongyan Zhou

TL;DR
This study systematically identifies and characterizes mid-infrared outbursts in nearby galaxies, revealing a population of dust-obscured nuclear transients likely related to SMBH activity, which are often missed by optical surveys.
Contribution
First comprehensive sample of MIR outbursts in low-redshift galaxies, highlighting their potential link to TDEs and AGN activity, and emphasizing the importance of infrared surveys.
Findings
137 galaxies with MIR flares identified
Most MIR outbursts are near galactic centers
Large population of dust-obscured transients suggested
Abstract
The optical time-domain astronomy has grown rapidly in the past decade but the dynamic infrared sky is rarely explored. Aiming to construct a sample of mid-infrared outburst in nearby galaxies (MIRONG), we have conducted a systematical search of low-redshift () SDSS spectroscopic galaxies that have experienced recent MIR flares using their Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) light curves. A total of 137 galaxies have been selected by requiring a brightening amplitude of 0.5 magnitude in at least one WISE band with respect to their quiescent phases. Only a small faction (10.9%) has corresponding optical flares. Except for the four supernova (SNe) in our sample, the MIR luminosity of remaining sources () are markedly brighter than known SNe and their physical locations are very close to the galactic center (median <0.1"). Only four…
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