The rate of extreme coronal line emitting galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and their relation to tidal disruption events
Joseph Callow, Or Graur, Peter Clark, Antonella Palmese, Jessica, Aguilar, Steven Ahlen, Segev BenZvi, David Brooks, Todd Claybaugh, Axel de la, Macorra, Peter Doel, Jaime E. Forero-Romero, Enrique Gazta\~naga, Satya, Gontcho A Gontcho, Andrew Lambert, Martin Landriau

TL;DR
This study estimates the occurrence rate of extreme coronal line emitting galaxies in SDSS and explores their potential link to tidal disruption events, finding that only a subset of TDEs produce observable ECLEs.
Contribution
It provides the most comprehensive rate calculation of variable ECLEs in SDSS and compares these rates to TDE rates, suggesting a partial connection between TDEs and ECLEs.
Findings
Detected 16 ECLEs in SDSS, doubling previous counts.
Calculated galaxy-normalized ECLE rate as approximately 3.6×10^{-6} per galaxy per year.
Found ECLE rates are 10-40% of TDE rates, indicating only some TDEs produce ECLEs.
Abstract
High-ionization iron coronal lines (CLs) are a rare phenomenon observed in galaxy and quasi-stellar object spectra that are thought to be created by high-energy emission from active galactic nuclei and certain types of transients. In cases known as extreme coronal line emitting galaxies (ECLEs), these CLs are strong and fade away on a timescale of years. The most likely progenitors of these variable CLs are tidal disruption events (TDEs), which produce sufficient high-energy emission to create and sustain the CLs over these timescales. To test the possible connection between ECLEs and TDEs, we present the most complete variable ECLE rate calculation to date and compare the results to TDE rates from the literature. To achieve this, we search for ECLEs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We detect sufficiently strong CLs in 16 galaxies, more than doubling the number previously found…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
