Investigating the Nature of the Luminous Ambiguous Nuclear Transient ASASSN-17jz
Thomas W.-S. Holoien, Jack M. M. Neustadt, Patrick J. Vallely, Katie, Auchettl, Jason T. Hinkle, Cristina Romero-Ca\~nizales, Benjamin J. Shappee,, Christopher S. Kochanek, K. Z. Stanek, Ping Chen, Subo Dong, Jose L. Prieto,, Todd A. Thompson, Thomas G. Brink

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the luminous and ambiguous nuclear transient ASASSN-17jz over 1200 days, suggesting it was likely a supernova IIn in an active galactic nucleus, with detailed observations of its luminosity, spectra, and evolution.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive multi-wavelength observational analysis of ASASSN-17jz and proposes a novel interpretation as a supernova IIn within an AGN environment, explaining its unique features.
Findings
Peak bolometric luminosity of 8.3×10^44 erg/s
Persistent late-time ultraviolet emission and increasing X-ray brightness
Spectral features consistent with AGN activity and transient Balmer lines
Abstract
We present observations of the extremely luminous but ambiguous nuclear transient (ANT) ASASSN-17jz, spanning roughly 1200 days of the object's evolution. ASASSN-17jz was discovered by the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN) in the galaxy SDSS J171955.84+414049.4 on UT 2017 July 27 at a redshift of . The transient peaked at an absolute -band magnitude of , corresponding to a bolometric luminosity of ~erg~s, and exhibited late-time ultraviolet emission that was still ongoing in our latest observations. Integrating the full light curve gives a total emitted energy of ~erg, with ~erg of this emitted within 200 days of peak light. This late-time ultraviolet emission is accompanied by increasing X-ray emission that becomes softer as…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
