ASASSN-14ko is a Periodic Nuclear Transient in ESO 253-G003

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Anna V. Payne
  • Benjamin J. Shappee
  • Jason T. Hinkle
  • Patrick J. Vallely
  • Christopher S. Kochanek
  • Thomas W. -S. Holoien
  • Katie Auchettl
  • K. Z. Stanek
  • Todd A. Thompson
  • Jack M. M. Neustadt
  • Michael A. Tucker
  • James D. Armstrong
  • Joseph Brimacombe
  • Paulo Cacella
  • Robert Cornect
  • Larry Denneau
  • Michael M. Fausnaugh
  • Heather Flewelling
  • Dirk Grupe
  • A. N. Heinze
  • And 7 others
  • Laura A. Lopez
  • Berto Monard
  • Jose L. Prieto
  • Adam C. Schneider
  • Scott S. Sheppard
  • John L. Tonry
  • Henry Weiland

We present the discovery that ASASSN-14ko is a periodically flaring active galactic nucleus at the center of the galaxy ESO 253-G003. At the time of its discovery by the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN), it was classified as a supernova close to the nucleus. The subsequent 6 yr of V- and g-band ASAS-SN observations revealed that ASASSN-14ko has nuclear flares occurring at regular intervals. The 17 observed outbursts show evidence of a decreasing period over time, with a mean period of P-0 = 114.2 0.4 days and a period derivative of P = -0.0017 +/- 0.003 . The most recent outburst in 2020 May, which took place as predicted, exhibited spectroscopic changes during the rise and had a UV bright, blackbody spectral energy distribution similar to tidal disruption events (TDEs). The X-ray flux decreased by a factor of 4 at the beginning of the outburst and then returned to its quiescent flux after similar to 8 days. The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite observed an outburst during Sectors 4-6, revealing a rise time of 5.60 0.05 days in the optical and a decline that is best fit with an exponential model. We discuss several possible scenarios to explain ASASSN-14ko's periodic outbursts, but currently favor a repeated partial TDE. The next outbursts should peak in the optical on UT 2020 September 7.41.1 and UT 2020 December 26.51.4.

Original languageEnglish
Article number125
JournalAstrophysical Journal
Volume910
Issue number2
Number of pages20
ISSN0004-637X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2021

    Research areas

  • Black hole physics, Galaxies, Seyfert galaxies, Galaxy accretion disks

Links

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