A new Bowen Fluorescence Flare and Extreme Coronal Line Emitter discovered by SRG/eROSITA
Pietro Baldini, Arne Rau, Riccardo Arcodia, Taeho Ryu, Zhu Liu, Paula S\'anchez-S\'aez, Iuliia Grotova, Andrea Merloni, Stefano Ciroi, Adelle J. Goodwin, Mariusz Gromadzki, Adela Kawka, Megan Masterson, Dus\'an Tub\'in-Arenas, David A.H. Buckley, Francesco Di Mille

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a nuclear transient with unique spectral features, linking Bowen fluorescence flares and extreme coronal line emitters, and suggests it may be related to tidal disruption events observed through systematic X-ray surveys.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed multiwavelength analysis of a transient linking Bowen fluorescence flares and ECLEs, proposing a possible TDE origin and highlighting the importance of X-ray surveys.
Findings
Detection of a transient with Bowen fluorescence and coronal lines
Association of the event with TDE-like phenomena
Unusual X-ray variability in the transient
Abstract
The nuclear transient eRASSt J012026.5-292727 (J012026 hereafter) was discovered in the second SRG/eROSITA all-sky survey (eRASS2). The source appeared more than one order of magnitude brighter than the eRASS1 upper limits (peak eRASS2 0.2-2.3 keV flux of 1.14 x 10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1), and with a soft X-ray spectrum (photon index Gamma = 4.3). Over the following months, the X-ray flux started decaying, with significant flaring activity on both hour- and year-timescales. By inspecting the multiwavelength light curves of time-domain wide-field facilities, we detected a strong mid-infrared flare, evolving over 2 years, and a weaker optical counterpart. Follow-up optical spectroscopy revealed transient features, including redshifted Balmer lines (FWHM ~1500 km/s), strong Fe II emission, He II and Bowen lines, and high-ionization iron coronal lines. One spectrum showed a triple-peaked H-beta…
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