The Host Galaxy and Rapidly Evolving Broad-line Region in the Changing-look Active Galactic Nucleus 1ES 1927+654
Ruancun Li, Luis C. Ho, Claudio Ricci, Benny Trakhtenbrot, Iair, Arcavi, Erin Kara, Daichi Hiramatsu

TL;DR
This study tracks the evolution of the broad-line region in the changing-look AGN 1ES 1927+654 over 500 days, revealing new insights into BLR formation, dynamics, and the host galaxy's properties during an outburst.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed temporal analysis of BLR development and host galaxy characteristics in a changing-look AGN following an outburst.
Findings
Broad emission lines appeared ~100 days post-outburst.
BLR clouds followed eccentric orbits with e ≈ 0.6.
The black hole mass is estimated at ~1.4 million solar masses.
Abstract
Changing-look active galactic nuclei (AGNs) present an important laboratory to understand the origin and physical properties of the broad-line region (BLR). We investigate follow-up optical spectroscopy spanning days after the outburst of the changing-look AGN 1ES\,1927+654. The emission lines displayed dramatic, systematic variations in intensity, velocity width, velocity shift, and symmetry. Analysis of optical spectra and multi-band images indicate that the host galaxy contains a pseudobulge and a total stellar mass of . Enhanced continuum radiation from the outburst produced an accretion disk wind, which condensed into BLR clouds in the region above and below the temporary eccentric disk. Broad Balmer lines emerged days after the outburst, together with an unexpected, additional component of narrow-line emission.…
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