Discovery and Follow-up of ASASSN-23bd (AT 2023clx): The Lowest Redshift and Least Luminous Tidal Disruption Event To Date
Abstract
We report the All-Sky Automated Survey for SuperNovae discovery of the tidal disruption event (TDE) ASASSN-23bd (AT 2023clx) in NGC 3799, a LINER galaxy with no evidence of strong AGN activity over the past decade. With a redshift of z = 0.01107 and a peak UV/optical luminosity of (5.40.4)×1042 erg s-1, ASASSN-23bd is the lowest-redshift and least-luminous TDE discovered to date. Spectroscopically, ASASSN-23bd shows Hα and He I emission throughout its spectral time series, and the UV spectrum shows nitrogen lines without the strong carbon and magnesium lines typically seen for AGN. Fits to the rising ASAS-SN light curve show that ASASSN-23bd started to brighten on MJD 59988+1-1, 9 days before discovery, with a nearly linear rise in flux, peaking in the g band on MJD 60000+3-3. Scaling relations and TDE light curve modelling find a black hole mass of 106 M, which is on the lower end of supermassive black hole masses. ASASSN-23bd is a dim X-ray source, with an upper limit of L0.3-10\,keV < 1.0×1040 erg s-1 from stacking all Swift observations prior to MJD 60061, but with soft ( 0.1 keV) thermal emission with a luminosity of L0.3-2 \,keV4×1039 erg s-1 in XMM-Newton observations on MJD 60095. The rapid (t < 15 days) light curve rise, low UV/optical luminosity, and a luminosity decline over 40 days of L40≈-0.7 make ASASSN-23bd one of the dimmest TDEs to date and a member of the growing ``Low Luminosity and Fast'' class of TDEs.
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