Deciphering the extreme X-ray variability of the nuclear transient eRASSt J045650.3-203750: A likely repeating partial tidal disruption event
Zhu Liu, A. Malyali, M. Krumpe, D. Homan, A. J. Goodwin, I. Grotova,, A. Kawka, A. Rau, A. Merloni, G. E. Anderson, J. C. A. Miller-Jones, A. G., Markowitz, S. Ciroi, F. Di Mille, M. Schramm, Shenli Tang, D. A. H. Buckley,, M. Gromadzki, Chichuan Jin, and J. Buchner

TL;DR
This paper reports on the detailed X-ray variability of the nuclear transient eRASSt J045650.3-203750, likely caused by a repeating partial tidal disruption event, revealing complex spectral and flux changes over approximately 223-day cycles.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of a repeating nuclear transient with multi-phase X-ray behavior, supporting the partial TDE scenario with insights into accretion disk and corona evolution.
Findings
The transient cycles through four distinct X-ray phases.
X-ray spectra evolve from very soft to harder states with increasing flux.
Radio emission appears only during the plateau phase and declines rapidly.
Abstract
(Abridged) In this paper, we present the results of an exceptional repeating X-ray nuclear transient, eRASSt J045650.3-203750 (hereafter J0456-20), uncovered by SRG/eROSITA in a quiescent galaxy at redshift of z~0.077. The main results are: 1) J0456-20 cycles through four distinctive phases: an X-ray rising phase leading into an X-ray plateau phase which lasts for ~2 months. This is terminated by a rapid X-ray flux drop phase during which the X-ray flux can drastically drop by more than a factor of 100 within 1 week followed by an X-ray faint state for about two months before it starts the X-ray rising phase again; 2) the X-ray spectra are generally soft in the rising phase with a photon index >3.0, and become harder as the X-ray flux increases. There is evidence of a multi-colour disk with inner region temperature of eV at the beginning of the X-ray rising phase. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
