Back from the dead: AT2019aalc as a candidate repeating TDE in an AGN
Patrik Mil\'an Veres, Anna Franckowiak, Sjoert van Velzen, Bjoern Adebahr, Sam Taziaux, Jannis Necker, Robert Stein, Alexander Kier, Ancla Mueller, Dominik J. Bomans, Nuria Jordana-Mitjans, Marek Kowalski, Erica Hammerstein, Elena Marci-Boehncke, Simeon Reusch, Simone Garrappa

TL;DR
This paper presents multi-wavelength observations of AT2019aalc, a transient in an AGN, revealing it as a Bowen Fluorescence Flare and an extreme coronal line emitter, suggesting a repeating TDE scenario within an active galactic nucleus.
Contribution
It introduces the classification of AT2019aalc as a Bowen Fluorescence Flare and links TDEs, ECLEs, and BFFs in AGNs, proposing a new repeating TDE model.
Findings
Multiple X-ray flares during re-brightening
Detection of Bowen Fluorescence and coronal lines
Potential connection between BFFs and neutrino events
Abstract
Context. To date, three nuclear transients have been associated with high-energy neutrino events. These transients are generally thought to be powered by tidal disruptions of stars (TDEs) by massive black holes. However, AT2019aalc, hosted in a Seyfert-1 galaxy, was not yet classified due to a lack of multiwavelength observations. Interestingly, the source has re-brightened 4 years after its discovery. Aims. Our aim is to constrain the physical mechanism responsible for the second optical flare, which may also provide clues to the origin of the initial event. Methods. We conducted a multi-wavelength monitoring program (from radio to X-rays) of AT2019aalc during its re-brightening in 2023/2024. Results. The observations revealed multiple X-ray flares during the second optical flaring episode of the transient and a uniquely bright UV counterpart. The second flare, similarly to the first…
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