Hello Darkness My Old Friend: The Fading of the Nearby TDE ASASSN-14ae
Abstract
We present late-time optical spectroscopy taken with the Large Binocular Telescope's Multi-Object Double Spectrograph, an improved ASAS-SN pre-discovery non-detection, and late-time SWIFT observations of the nearby (d=193 Mpc, z=0.0436) tidal disruption event (TDE) ASASSN-14ae. Our observations span from 20 days before to 750 days after discovery. The proximity of ASASSN-14ae allows us to study the optical evolution of the flare and the transition to a host dominated state with exceptionally high precision. We measure very weak Hα emission 300 days after discovery (L Hα 4× 1039 ergs s-1) and the most stringent upper limit to date on the Hα luminosity 750 days after discovery (L Hα 1039 ergs s-1), suggesting that the optical emission arising from a TDE can vanish on a timescale as short as 1 year. Our results have important implications for both spectroscopic detection of TDE candidates at late times, as well as the nature of TDE host galaxies themselves.
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