Still alive and kicking: A significant outburst in changing-look AGN Mrk 1018
R. Brogan, M. Krumpe, D. Homan, T. Urrutia, T. Granzer, B. Husemann,, J. Neumann, M. Gaspari, S. P. Vaughan, S. M. Croom, F. Combes, M. P\'erez, Torres, A. Coil, R. McElroy, N. Winkel, M. Singha

TL;DR
This study documents a significant outburst in the changing-look AGN Mrk 1018, analyzing multi-wavelength data to understand the event's nature, structure responses, and implications for accretion processes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed high-cadence multi-wavelength monitoring of a major outburst in Mrk 1018, revealing the event's asymmetric profile and multi-band responses, and discusses potential physical mechanisms.
Findings
Flux increased by a factor of ~13 during outburst
Outburst was asymmetric with a faster rise than decline
X-ray flux remained unchanged, but the iron line doubled in strength
Abstract
Changing-look active galactic nuclei (CL-AGN) have been observed to change optical spectral type. Mrk 1018 is unique: first classified as a type 1.9 Seyfert galaxy, it transitioned to a type 1 before returning to its initial classification after approximately 30 years. We present a high-cadence monitoring programme that caught a major outburst in 2020. Due to sunblock, only the decline could be observed. We studied X-ray, UV, optical, and IR before and after the outburst to investigate the responses of the AGN structures. We derived a u'-band light curve of the AGN contribution alone. The flux increased by a factor of the order of 13. We confirmed this in other optical bands and determined the shape and speed of the decline in each waveband. The shapes of H beta and H alpha were analysed before and after the event. Two XMM-Newton observations from before and after the outburst were also…
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