Spectropolarimetry of a Nuclear Transient AT2023clx: Revealing the Geometrical Alignment between the Transient Outflow and the Nuclear Dusty Region
Uno, Kohki; Maeda, Keiichi; Nagao, Takashi; Leloudas, Giorgos; Charalampopoulos, Panos; Mattila, Seppo; Aoki, Kentaro; Taguchi, Kenta; Kawabata, Miho; Moldon, Javier; Perez-Torres, Miguel; Pursiainen, Miika; Reynolds, Thomas
Spectropolarimetry of a Nuclear Transient AT2023clx: Revealing the Geometrical Alignment between the Transient Outflow and the Nuclear Dusty Region
Uno, Kohki
Maeda, Keiichi
Nagao, Takashi
Leloudas, Giorgos
Charalampopoulos, Panos
Mattila, Seppo
Aoki, Kentaro
Taguchi, Kenta
Kawabata, Miho
Moldon, Javier
Perez-Torres, Miguel
Pursiainen, Miika
Reynolds, Thomas
Institute of Physics Publishing Ltd.
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025082788578
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025082788578
Tiivistelmä
AT2023clx, which occurred in NGC 3799 with a low-ionization nuclear emission-line region (LINER), is one of the most nearby nuclear transients classified as a tidal disruption event (TDE). We present three-epoch spectropolarimetric follow-up observations of AT2023clx. We detected two polarization components; one is a constant polarization of similar to 1% originating from an aspherical outflow associated with the transient, while the other is a blue-excess polarization toward similar to 2% originating from a nuclear dusty environment via light echoes. The polarization angle flipped by 90 degrees between the two epochs, indicating that the outflow direction was perpendicular to the dust plane. Furthermore, the polarized flux might suggest that the nuclear dust favors relatively large grains, potentially offering constraints on its physical properties. Such polarization features-the blue excess and the 90 degrees flip-have never been observed in previous TDE polarization samples, highlighting unique mechanisms behind AT2023clx. We propose possible scenarios: the disruption of a star formed within or captured by a nuclear dusty cloud. Given the LINER nature of NGC3799, the dusty region may possibly be linked to a torus or disk associated with a weak active galactic nucleus (AGN). Furthermore, as a more speculative scenario, the event might have been triggered by AGN-like activity, potentially linked to changing-look AGNs or ambiguous nuclear transients. These findings highlight the power of time-series spectropolarimetry of TDEs, not only in probing the origins of nuclear transients but also in investigating the physical properties of nuclear dust.
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