4 research outputs found
Swift J1112.2-8238: A Candidate Relativistic Tidal Disruption Flare
We present observations of Swift J1112.2-8238, and identify it as a candidate
relativistic tidal disruption flare (rTDF). The outburst was first detected by
Swift/BAT in June 2011 as an unknown, long-lived (order of days) -ray
transient source. We show that its position is consistent with the nucleus of a
faint galaxy for which we establish a likely redshift of based on a
single emission line that we interpret as the blended [OII]
doublet. At this redshift, the peak X/-ray luminosity exceeded
ergs s, while a spatially coincident optical transient source
had (M at ) during early
observations, days after the Swift trigger. These properties place
Swift J1112.2-8238 in a very similar region of parameter space to the two
previously identified members of this class, Swift J1644+57 and Swift
J2058+0516. As with those events the high-energy emission shows evidence for
variability over the first few days, while late time observations, almost 3
years post-outburst, demonstrate that it has now switched off. Swift
J1112.2-8238 brings the total number of such events observed by Swift to three,
interestingly all detected by Swift over a 3 month period ( of its
total lifetime as of March 2015). While this suggests the possibility that
further examples may be uncovered by detailed searches of the BAT archives, the
lack of any prime candidates in the years since 2011 means these events are
undoubtedly rare.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication by MNRA
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Swift J1112.2-8238: A Candidate Relativistic Tidal Disruption Flare
We present observations of Swift J1112.2-8238, and identify it as a candidate relativistic tidal disruption flare (rTDF). The outburst was first detected by Swift/BAT in June 2011 as an unknown, long-lived (order of days) γ-ray transient source. We show that its position is consistent with the nucleus of a faint galaxy for which we establish a likely redshift of z = 0.89 based on a single emission line that we interpret as the blended [Oii]λ3727 doublet. At this redshift, the peak X/γ-ray luminosity exceeded 1047 ergs s−1, while a spatially coincident optical transient source had i 0∼22 (Mg∼ − 21.4 at z = 0.89) during early observations, ∼20 days after the Swift trigger. These properties place Swift J1112.2-8238 in a very similar region of parameter space to the two previously identified members of this class, Swift J1644+57 and Swift J2058+0516. As with those events the high-energy emission shows evidence for variability over the first few days, while late time observations, almost 3 years postoutburst, demonstrate that it has now switched off. Swift J1112.2-8238 brings the total number of such events observed by Swift to three, interestingly all detected by Swift over a ∼3 month period (< 3% of its total lifetime as of March 2015). While this suggests the possibility that further examples may be uncovered by detailed searches of the BAT archives, the lack of any prime candidates in the years since 2011 means these events are undoubtedly rare.Astronom