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Swift spectra of AT2018cow: a white dwarf tidal disruption event?

Authors :
Craig B. Markwardt
S. Bradley Cenko
N. Paul M. Kuin
J. A. Kennea
S. R. Oates
Sam Emery
A. Y. Lien
Eleonora Troja
Kinwah Wu
Andrew J. Levan
Michael H. Siegel
Qin Han
J. P. Osborne
A. Tohuvavohu
Massimiliano De Pasquale
Mat Page
K. L. Page
Peter J. Brown
A. A. Breeveld
Sergio Campana
David N. Burrows
B. Sbarufatti
ITA
USA
GBR
TUR
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2019.

Abstract

The bright transient AT2018cow has been unlike any other known type of transient. Its high brightness, rapid rise and decay and initially nearly featureless spectrum are unprecedented and difficult to explain using models for similar burst sources. We present evidence for faint gamma-ray emission continuing for at least 8 days, and featureless spectra in the ultraviolet bands -- both unusual for eruptive sources. The X-ray variability of the source has a burst-like character. The UV-optical spectrum does not show any CNO line but is well described by a blackbody. We demonstrate that a model invoking the tidal disruption of a 0.1 - 0.4 Msun Helium White Dwarf (WD) by a 100,000 to one million solar mass Black Hole (BH) located in the outskirts of galaxy Z~137-068 could provide an explanation for most of the characteristics shown in the multi-wavelength observations. A blackbody-like emission is emitted from an opaque photosphere, formed by the debris of the WD disruption. Broad features showing up in the optical/infrared spectra in the early stage are probably velocity broadened lines produced in a transient high-velocity outward moving cocoon. The asymmetric optical/infrared lines that appeared at a later stage are emission from an atmospheric layer when it detached from thermal equilibrium with the photosphere, which undergoes more rapid cooling. The photosphere shrinks when its temperature drops, and the subsequent infall of the atmosphere produced asymmetric line profiles. Additionally, a non-thermal jet might be present, emitting X-rays in the 10-150 keV band.

Details

ISSN :
13652966 and 00358711
Volume :
487
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dc2efd6d27ee62810112b1873489fcf0