TDE 2025abcr: A Tidal Disruption Event in the Outskirts of a Massive Galaxy
Robert Stein, Jonathan Carney, Charlotte Ward, Raffaella Margutti, Xander J. Hall, Itai Sfaradi, Igor Andreoni, Ryan Chornock, Suvi Gezari, Geoffrey Mo, Yuhan Yao, Eric C. Bellm, Joshua S. Bloom, Malte Busmann, Ilaria Caiazzo, S. Bradley Cenko, Matthew J. Graham, Steven L. Groom

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the first optical tidal disruption event occurring outside a galaxy nucleus, identified using a machine learning classifier, and discusses its implications for black hole populations and future surveys.
Contribution
It introduces a novel off-nuclear TDE detection method using ML classification and presents the first confirmed case of an offset TDE in the outskirts of a galaxy.
Findings
First optical TDE discovered outside galaxy nucleus.
Offset TDE rate constrained to less than 10% of nuclear TDEs.
Many similar offset TDEs expected to be detected annually by Rubin Observatory.
Abstract
Tidal disruption events (TDEs) have traditionally been discovered in optical sky surveys through targeted searches of nuclear transients. However, it is expected that some TDEs will occur outside the galaxy nucleus, arising from wandering black holes originating in galaxy mergers. Here we present observations of TDE 2025abcr, the first optical TDE discovered in the outskirts of a host galaxy. The TDE was identified by a custom 'off-nuclear' implementation of the ML classifier , which classifies new ZTF transients based on their lightcurves. Follow-up observations confirm that TDE 2025abcr is a TDE-H+He, occurring 9.5 (10.3 kpc projected distance) from the nucleus of a massive galaxy ( = ) with a central black hole mass of . TDE 2025abcr itself was likely disrupted by a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
