iPTF16fnl: A Faint and Fast Tidal Disruption Event in an E+A Galaxy
/ Authors
N. Blagorodnova, S. Gezari, T. Hung, S. Kulkarni, S. B. Cenko, S. B. Cenko, D. Pasham, Lin Yan, I. Arcavi, I. Arcavi
and 31 more authors
S. Ben-Ami, S. Ben-Ami, B. Bue, T. Cantwell, Yi Cao, A. Castro-Tirado, R. Fender, C. Fremling, A. Gal-yam, A. Ho, A. Horesh, G. Hosseinzadeh, G. Hosseinzadeh, M. Kasliwal, A. Kong, A. Kong, R. Laher, G. Leloudas, G. Leloudas, R. Lunnan, R. Lunnan, F. Masci, K. Mooley, J. Neill, P. Nugent, P. Nugent, M. Powell, A. Valeev, P. Vreeswijk, R. Walters, P. Wozniak
/ Abstract
We present ground-based and Swift observations of iPTF16fnl, a likely tidal disruption event (TDE) discovered by the intermediate Palomar Transient Factory (iPTF) survey at 66.6 Mpc. The light curve of the object peaked at an absolute mag . The maximum bolometric luminosity (from optical and UV) was erg s−1, an order of magnitude fainter than any other optical TDE discovered so far. The luminosity in the first 60 days is consistent with an exponential decay, with , where t0 = 57631.0 (MJD) and days. The X-ray shows a marginal detection at erg s−1 (Swift X-ray Telescope). No radio counterpart was detected down to 3σ, providing upper limits for monochromatic radio luminosities of erg s−1 and erg s−1 (Very Large Array, 6.1 and 22 GHz). The blackbody temperature, obtained from combined Swift UV and optical photometry, shows a constant value of 19,000 K. The transient spectrum at peak is characterized by broad He ii and Hα emission lines, with FWHMs of about 14,000 km s−1 and 10,000 km s−1, respectively. He i lines are also detected at λλ 5875 and 6678. The spectrum of the host is dominated by strong Balmer absorption lines, which are consistent with a post-starburst (E+A) galaxy with an age of ∼650 Myr and solar metallicity. The characteristics of iPTF16fnl make it an outlier on both luminosity and decay timescales, as compared to other optically selected TDEs. The discovery of such a faint optical event suggests a higher rate of tidal disruptions, as low-luminosity events may have gone unnoticed in previous searches.
Journal: The Astrophysical Journal