Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/7887
Title: Real-time discovery of AT2020xnd: a fast, luminous ultraviolet transient with minimal radioactive ejecta
Authors: Perley, Daniel A
Ho, Anna Y. Q
Yao, Yuhan
Fremling, Christoffer
Anderson, Joseph P
Schulze, Steve
Kumar, Harsh
Anupama, G. C
Barway, Sudhanshu
Bellm, Eric C
Bhalerao, Varun
Chen, Ting-Wan
Duev, Dmitry A
Galbany, Llu´ıs
Graham, Matthew J
Gromadzk, Mariusz
Gutierrez, Claudia P
Ihanec, Nada
Inserra, Cosimo
Kasliwal, Mansi M
Kool, Erik C
Kulkarni, S. R
Laher, Russ R
Masci, Frank J
Neill, James D
Nicholl, Matt
Pursiainen, Miika
Roestel, Joannes van
Sharma, Yashvi
Sollerman, Jesper
Walters, Richard
Wiseman, Philip
Keywords: supernovae: individual: AT2020xnd
transients: supernovae
Issue Date: Dec-2021
Publisher: Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society
Citation: Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol. 508, No. 4, pp. 5138–5147
Abstract: The many unusual properties of the enigmatic AT2018cow suggested that at least some subset of the empirical class of fast blue optical transients (FBOTs) represents a genuinely new astrophysical phenomenon. Unfortunately, the intrinsic rarity and fleeting nature of these events have made it difficult to identify additional examples early enough to acquire the observations necessary to constrain theoretical models. We present here the Zwicky Transient Facility discovery of AT2020xnd (ZTF20acigmel, the ‘Camel’) at z = 0.243, the first unambiguous AT2018cow analogue to be found and confirmed in real time. AT2018cow and AT2020xnd share all key observational properties: a fast optical rise, sustained high photospheric temperature, absence of a second peak attributable to ejection of a radioactively heated stellar envelope, extremely luminous radio, millimetre, and X-ray emission, and a dwarf-galaxy host. This supports the argument that AT2018cow-like events represent a distinct phenomenon from slower-evolving radio-quiet supernovae, likely requiring a different progenitor or a different central engine. The sample properties of the four known members of this class to date disfavour tidal disruption models but are consistent with the alternative model of an accretion powered jet following the direct collapse of a massive star to a black hole. Contextual filtering of alert streams combined with rapid photometric verification using multiband imaging provides an efficient way to identify future members of this class, even at high redshift
Description: Restricted Access
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2248/7887
ISSN: 1365-2966
Appears in Collections:IIAP Publications

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