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A mildly relativistic outflow from the energetic, fast-rising blue optical transient CSS161010 in a dwarf galaxy

Authors :
Coppejans, D. L.
Margutti, R.
Terreran, G.
Nayana, A. J.
Coughlin, E. R.
Laskar, T.
Alexander, K. D.
Bietenholz, M.
Caprioli, D.
Chandra, P.
Drout, M.
Frederiks, D.
Frohmaier, C.
Hurley, K.
Kochanek, C. S.
MacLeod, M.
Meisner, A.
Nugent, P. E.
Ridnaia, A.
Sand, D. J.
Svinkin, D.
Ward, C.
Yang, S.
Baldeschi, A.
Chilingarian, I. V.
Dong, Y.
Esquivia, C.
Fong, W.
Guidorzi, C.
Lundqvist, P.
Milisavljevic, D.
Paterson, K.
Reichart, D. E.
Shappee, B.
Stroh, M. C.
Valenti, S.
Zauderer, A.
Zhang, B.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

We present X-ray and radio observations of the Fast Blue Optical Transient (FBOT) CRTS-CSS161010 J045834-081803 (CSS161010 hereafter) at t=69-531 days. CSS161010 shows luminous X-ray ($L_x\sim5\times 10^{39}\,\rm{erg\,s^{-1}}$) and radio ($L_{\nu}\sim10^{29}\,\rm{erg\,s^{-1}Hz^{-1}}$) emission. The radio emission peaked at ~100 days post transient explosion and rapidly decayed. We interpret these observations in the context of synchrotron emission from an expanding blastwave. CSS161010 launched a mildly relativistic outflow with velocity $\Gamma\beta c\ge0.55c$ at ~100 days. This is faster than the non-relativistic AT2018cow ($\Gamma\beta c\sim0.1c$) and closer to ZTF18abvkwla ($\Gamma\beta c\ge0.3c$ at 63 days). The inferred initial kinetic energy of CSS161010 ($E_k\gtrsim10^{51}$ erg) is comparable to that of long Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs), but the ejecta mass that is coupled to the mildly relativistic outflow is significantly larger ($\sim0.01-0.1\,\rm{M_{\odot}}$). This is consistent with the lack of observed gamma-rays. The luminous X-rays were produced by a different emission component to the synchrotron radio emission. CSS161010 is located at ~150 Mpc in a dwarf galaxy with stellar mass $M_{*}\sim10^{7}\,\rm{M_{\odot}}$ and specific star formation rate $sSFR\sim 0.3\,\rm{Gyr^{-1}}$. This mass is among the lowest inferred for host-galaxies of explosive transients from massive stars. Our observations of CSS161010 are consistent with an engine-driven aspherical explosion from a rare evolutionary path of a H-rich stellar progenitor, but we cannot rule out a stellar tidal disruption event on a centrally-located intermediate mass black hole. Regardless of the physical mechanism, CSS161010 establishes the existence of a new class of rare (rate $<0.4\%$ of the local core-collapse supernova rate) H-rich transients that can launch mildly relativistic outflows.<br />Comment: Accepted to ApJL

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2003.10503
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/2041-8213/ab8cc7