Roaring to softly whispering: Persistent X-ray emission at the location of the Fast Blue Optical Transient AT2018cow 3.7 yrs after discovery and implications on accretion-powered scenarios

Abstract

We present the first deep X-ray observations of a luminous FBOT AT2018cow, at 3.7\,yr since discovery, together with the re-analysis of the observation at δ t 220 d. X-ray emission is significantly detected at a location consistent with AT2018cow. The very soft X-ray spectrum and sustained luminosity are distinct from the spectral and temporal behavior of the LFBOT in the first 100 d, and would possibly signal the emergence of a new emission component, although a robust association with AT2018cow can only be claimed at δ t 220 d, while at δ t 1350 d contamination of the host galaxy cannot be excluded. We interpret these findings in the context of the late-time panchromatic emission from AT2018cow, which includes the detection of persistent, slowly-fading UV emission with L≈ 1039\,erg\,s-1. Similar to previous works, (and in analogy with arguments for Ultra-Luminous X-ray sources --ULXs), these late-time observations are consistent with thin-disks around Intermediate Mass Black Holes (IMBHs, with M≈ 103-104\, M) accreting at sub-Eddington rates. However, differently from previous studies, we find that smaller-mass BHs with M≈ 10-100\,M accreting at the Eddington rate cannot be ruled out, and provide a natural explanation for the inferred compact size (R out ≈ 40\,R) of the accretion disk years after the optical flare. Most importantly, irrespective of the accretor mass, our study lends support to the hypothesis that LFBOTs are accretion-powered phenomena and that, specifically, LFBOTs constitute electromagnetic manifestations of super-Eddington accreting systems that evolve to Eddington over a ≈ 100 days time scale.

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