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  • The tidal disruption event ...
    Short, P; Nicholl, M; Lawrence, A; Gomez, S; Arcavi, I; Wevers, T; Leloudas, G; Schulze, S; Anderson, J P; Berger, E; Blanchard, P K; Burke, J; Segura, N Castro; Charalampopoulos, P; Chornock, R; Galbany, L; Gromadzki, M; Herzog, L J; Hiramatsu, D; Horne, Keith; Hosseinzadeh, G; Howell, D Andrew; Ihanec, N; Inserra, C; Kankare, E; Maguire, K; McCully, C; Müller Bravo, T E; Onori, F; Sollerman, J; Young, D R

    Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 11/2020, Volume: 498, Issue: 3
    Journal Article

    ABSTRACT We present results from spectroscopic observations of AT 2018hyz, a transient discovered by the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernova survey at an absolute magnitude of MV ∼ −20.2 mag, in the nucleus of a quiescent galaxy with strong Balmer absorption lines. AT 2018hyz shows a blue spectral continuum and broad emission lines, consistent with previous TDE candidates. High cadence follow-up spectra show broad Balmer lines and He i in early spectra, with He ii making an appearance after ∼70–100 d. The Balmer lines evolve from a smooth broad profile, through a boxy, asymmetric double-peaked phase consistent with accretion disc emission, and back to smooth at late times. The Balmer lines are unlike typical active galactic nucleus in that they show a flat Balmer decrement (Hα/Hβ ∼ 1.5), suggesting the lines are collisionally excited rather than being produced via photoionization. The flat Balmer decrement together with the complex profiles suggests that the emission lines originate in a disc chromosphere, analogous to those seen in cataclysmic variables. The low optical depth of material due to a possible partial disruption may be what allows us to observe these double-peaked, collisionally excited lines. The late appearance of He ii may be due to an expanding photosphere or outflow, or late-time shocks in debris collisions.