The rise and fall of the iron-strong nuclear transient PS16dtm
T. Petrushevska, G. Leloudas, D. Ilic, M. Bronikowski, P., Charalampopoulos, G. K. Jaisawal, E. Paraskeva, M. Pursiainen, N. Rakic, S., Schulze, K. Taggart, C. K. Wedderkopp, J. P. Anderson, T. de Boer, K., Chambers, T. W. Chen, G. Damljanovic, M. Fraser, H. Gao, A. Gomboc, M.

TL;DR
This study presents a detailed multiwavelength analysis of the nuclear transient PS16dtm in a NLSy1 galaxy, exploring its spectral and photometric evolution over 2000 days to understand its nature and distinguish it from similar phenomena.
Contribution
It provides extensive observational data and improved modeling of PS16dtm, a candidate TDE, enhancing understanding of nuclear outbursts in NLSy1 galaxies and their distinguishing features.
Findings
Double-peaked UV/optical light curve with a decline to preoutburst levels.
Simultaneous rise in MIR emission with optical, still increasing at last observation.
Detection of the strongest broad Fe II emission in a nuclear transient.
Abstract
Thanks to the advent of large-scale optical surveys, a diverse set of flares from the nuclear regions of galaxies has recently been discovered. These include the disruption of stars by supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies - nuclear transients known as tidal disruption events (TDEs). Active galactic nuclei (AGN) can show extreme changes in the brightness and emission line intensities, often referred to as changing-look AGN (CLAGN). Given the physical and observational similarities, the interpretation and distinction of nuclear transients as CLAGN or TDEs remains difficult. One of the obstacles of making progress in the field is the lack of well-sampled data of long-lived nuclear outbursts in AGN. Here, we study PS16dtm, a nuclear transient in a Narrow Line Seyfert 1 (NLSy1) galaxy, which has been proposed to be a TDE candidate. Our aim is to study the spectroscopic and…
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.
