EP241021a: a months-duration X-ray transient with luminous optical and radio emission
Shu Xinwen, Yang Lei, Yang Haonan, Xu Fan, Chen Jinhong, Eyles-Ferris Rob A. J., Dai Lixin, Yu Yunwei, Shen Rongfeng, Sun Luming, Ding Hucheng, Jiang Ning, Li Wenxiong, Sun Ningchen, Xu Dong, Zheng Weikang, Zhang Zhumao, Jin Chichuan, Rau Arne, Wang Tinggui, Wu Xuefeng

TL;DR
The paper reports the discovery and multiwavelength analysis of a unique, long-lasting X-ray transient with luminous optical and radio emissions, suggesting a new class of astrophysical events involving relativistic jets and complex origins.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed observation of EP241021a, a months-duration X-ray transient with multiwavelength counterparts, proposing it as a potential new class of astrophysical phenomena.
Findings
Detected a long-lasting X-ray transient with a 30-day afterglow.
Observed luminous optical and radio counterparts with high peak luminosities.
Identified features suggesting relativistic jets and complex origins.
Abstract
We present the discovery of a peculiar X-ray transient, EP241021a, by the Einstein Probe (EP) mission, and the results from multiwavelength follow-up observations. The transient was first detected with the Wide-field X-ray Telescope as an intense flare lasting for ~100 s, reaching a luminosity of L_(0.5-4 keV)~10^48 erg/s at z=0.748. Further observations with EP's Follow-up X-ray Telescope reveal a huge drop in the X-ray flux by a factor of >1000 within 1.5 days. After maintaining a nearly plateau phase for ~7 days, the X-ray flux declines as t^-1.2 over a period of ~30 days, followed by a sudden decrease to an undetectable level by EP and XMM-Newton, making it the longest afterglow emission detected among known fast X-ray transients. A bright counterpart at optical and radio wavelengths was also detected, with high peak luminosities in excess of 10^44 erg/s and 10^41 erg/s,…
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