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Evidence for a compact object in the aftermath of the extragalactic transient AT2018cow

Authors :
Francesco Tombesi
Zaven Arzoumanian
James F. Steiner
Jeroen Homan
M. Ng
Edward M. Cackett
Tod E. Strohmayer
Ronald A. Remillard
Diego Altamirano
Keith C. Gendreau
William Alston
Dheeraj R. Pasham
Deepto Chakrabarty
Jon M. Miller
Peter Bult
Alice K. Harding
Andrew C. Fabian
Brian Metzger
Wynn C. G. Ho
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2022.

Abstract

The brightest Fast Blue Optical Transients (FBOTs) are mysterious extragalactic explosions that may represent a new class of astrophysical phenomena. Their fast time to maximum brightness of less than a week and decline over several months and atypical optical spectra and evolution are difficult to explain within the context of core-collapse of massive stars which are powered by radioactive decay of Nickel-56 and evolve more slowly. AT2018cow (at redshift of 0.014) is an extreme FBOT in terms of rapid evolution and high luminosities. Here we present evidence for a high-amplitude quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO) of AT2018cow's soft X-rays with a frequency of 224 Hz (at 3.7$\sigma$ significance level or false alarm probability of 0.02%) and fractional root-mean-squared amplitude of >30%. This signal is found in the average power density spectrum taken over the entire 60-day outburst and suggests a highly persistent signal that lasts for a billion cycles. The high frequency (rapid timescale) of 224 Hz (4.4 ms) argues for a compact object in AT2018cow, which can be a neutron star or black hole with a mass less than 850 solar masses. If the QPO is the spin period of a neutron star, we can set limits on the star's magnetic field strength. Our work highlights a new way of using high time-resolution X-ray observations to study FBOTs.<br />Comment: Published in Nature astronomy on 13th December 2021

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....83f0daf043589a1588744beaae8cfc70