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  • Slow-blue nuclear hypervari...
    Lawrence, A; Bruce, A. G; MacLeod, C; Gezari, S; Elvis, M; Ward, M; Smartt, S. J; Smith, K. W; Wright, D; Fraser, M; Marshall, P; Kaiser, N; Burgett, W; Magnier, E; Tonry, J; Chambers, K; Wainscoat, R; Waters, C; Price, P; Metcalfe, N; Valenti, S; Kotak, R; Mead, A; Inserra, C; Chen, T. W; Soderberg, A

    Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 11/2016, Letnik: 463, Številka: 1
    Journal Article

    We discuss 76 large amplitude transients (Δm > 1.5) occurring in the nuclei of galaxies, nearly all with no previously known active galactic nucleus (AGN). They have been discovered as part of the Pan-STARRS1 (PS1) 3π survey, by comparison with Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) photometry a decade earlier, and then monitored with the Liverpool Telescope, and studied spectroscopically with the William Herschel Telescope (WHT). Based on colours, light-curve shape, and spectra, these transients fall into four groups. A few are misclassified stars or objects of unknown type. Some are red/fast transients and are known or likely nuclear supernovae. A few are either radio sources or erratic variables and so likely blazars. However the majority (∼66 per cent) are blue and evolve slowly, on a time-scale of years. Spectroscopy shows them to be AGN at z ∼ 0.3 − 1.4, which must have brightened since the SDSS photometry by around an order of magnitude. It is likely that these objects were in fact AGN a decade ago, but too weak to be recognized by SDSS; they could then be classed as ‘hypervariable’ AGN. By searching the SDSS Stripe 82 quasar database, we find 15 similar objects. We discuss several possible explanations for these slow-blue hypervariables – (i) unusually luminous tidal disruption events; (ii) extinction events; (iii) changes in accretion state; and (iv) large amplitude microlensing by stars in foreground galaxies. A mixture of explanations (iii) and (iv) seems most likely. Both hold promise of considerable new insight into the AGN phenomenon.