SRG/eROSITA No. 5: Discovery of quasi-periodic eruptions every ~3.7 days from a galaxy at z>0.1
R. Arcodia, P. Baldini, A. Merloni, A. Rau, K. Nandra, J. Chakraborty, A. J. Goodwin, M. J. Page, J. Buchner, M. Masterson, I. Monageng, Z. Arzoumanian, D. Buckley, E. Kara, G. Ponti, M. E. Ramos-Ceja, M. Salvato, K. Gendreau, I. Grotova, M. Krumpe

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a new galaxy with quasi-periodic X-ray eruptions every ~3.7 days, the most distant known, supporting models of stellar debris streams around black holes, and highlights eROSITA's success in finding such phenomena.
Contribution
First detection of a high-redshift QPE source with detailed analysis, confirming correlations and supporting star-disk collision models, demonstrating eROSITA's effectiveness in discovering QPEs.
Findings
eRO-QPE5 is the most distant QPE source at z=0.1155.
Confirmed a correlation between QPE duration and recurrence time.
Supported star-disk collision models for QPE origin.
Abstract
Quasi-periodic eruptions (QPEs) are repeating soft X-ray bursts from the nuclei of galaxies, tantalizingly proposed to be extreme mass ratio inspirals. Here, we report the discovery of a new galaxy showing X-ray QPEs, the fifth found through a dedicated blind search in the \emph{SRG}/eROSITA all-sky survey data, hereafter named eRO-QPE5. Its QPE duration (\,d), recurrence time (d), integrated energy per eruption (erg), and black hole mass () sit at the high end of the known population. Like other eROSITA or X-ray-discovered QPEs, no previous or concurrent optical-IR transient is found in archival photometric datasets, and the optical spectrum looks almost featureless. With a spectroscopic redshift of , eRO-QPE5 is the most distant QPE source discovered to…
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