Peremennye Zvezdy

Peremennye Zvezdy (Variable Stars) 32, No. 2, 2012

Received May 17; accepted June 1.

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The Spectrum of the Optical Transient in NGC 5775

E.A. Barsukova1, S.N. Fabrika1, V.P. Goranskij2, and A.F. Valeev1

Special Astrophysical Observatory, Russian Academy of Science, Nizhnij Arkhyz, Karachai-Cherkesia, 369167, Russia; e-mail: bars@sao.ru

Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Lomonosov Moscow University, Universitetski pr., 13, Moscow, 199992, Russia


On 2012 April 25, we acquired spectra and images of NGC 5775 OT PSN J14535395+0334049, classified as a calcium transient similar to NGC 300 OT and SN 2008S in NGC 6496. The Russian 6-m telescope and the SCORPIO focal reducer were used. The spectral range was  Å and the spectral resolution, 5.4 Å. The spectrum is noisy and shows a continuum with an emission line. The line has a two-component profile containing a narrow component, with FWHM 300 km s, and a broad one, with FWHM 4000 km s. The object is located at the front of the edge-on galaxy disk, it is weakly reddened. We estimate its as on the date of observation, typical of a calcium-type supernova impostor.

1. INTRODUCTION

Intermediate-luminosity optical transients are the eruptive stars that hit the peak-luminosity gap between classical novae and core-collapsed supernovae (SNe). The gap ranges between absolute magnitudes and (Berger et al., 2009). This family of astrophysical objects includes heterogeneous groups of stars: (1) Luminous Blue Variables that experienced large outbursts ( Car, SNe 1961V and 1954J); (2) the so-called calcium transients (SN 2008S in NGC 6496, NGC 300 OT); and (3) red novae (V1006/7 in M31, V838 Mon). Outburst spectra of the first two groups resemble SNe IIn, where "n" reflects presence of narrow hydrogen and other emission lines. SNe IIn have absolute magnitudes , typical of core-collapsed SNe II (Schlegel, 1990). Van Dyk et al. (2000) called lower-luminosity SNe IIn (group 1) "supernova impostors", i.e. stars that feign their being supernovae. Later, the term "SN impostor" was applied also to group 2 transients (Berger et al., 2009; Smith et al., 2009).

In the group of calcium transients, NGC 300 OT2008-1 got the peak absolute magnitude of and developed a late F-type absorption spectrum with hydrogen emissions, the CaII emission triplet at , 8542, and 8662 Å, the [CaII] doublet at and 7323 Å, and the strong CaII H&K absorption doublet at and 3968 Å (Bond et al., 2009; Humphreys et al., 2011). There are also the OI Å absorption, [O I] and 6363 Å emission lines. The temperature derived from continuum energy distribution was 4670 K (Berger at al., 2009). The spectrum is similar to that of the cool Galactic hypergiant IRC+10420. The emission lines had a complex double-peak structure suggesting development of a bipolar outflow. Another calcium transient, SN 2008S in NGC 6496, had a peak magnitude and a spectrum similar to NGC 300 OT (Smith et al., 2009). Its temperature in the outburst was measured as 7500 K from the continuum light distribution. Progenitors of both transients were identified in far infrared using the Spitzer Space Telescope.

The progenitor of NGC 300 OT was detected in all five bands of Spitzer IRAC and MIPS images in the wavelength range from 3.6 to 24 m (Berger et al., 2009). Its spectral energy distribution can be fitted by a black body with the temperature 338 K and bolometric luminosity  . The progenitor of SN 2008S was clearly seen in the IR bands at 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 m and did not vary during three years. Its blackbody temperature was  K (Prieto et al., 2008; Wesson et al., 2010). The source had a bolometric luminosity of  . Both progenitors were not seen in optical bands over the limits of the deepest frames of the Hubble Space Telescope. It becomes clear that both progenitors are OH/IR stars. In the Temperature Luminosity diagram they are located at the AGB sequence, being extremely cool and luminous (super-AGB) stars. Khan et al. (2010) measured archival images of Spitzer IRAC of four nearby galaxies, M 33, NGC 300, M 81, and NGC 6946, and found that such objects occured very seldom, there were only a few of them in each galaxy. In NGC 300 and NGC 6496, such super-AGB stars were single, and both exploded. They are considered as dusty-enshrouded luminous stars with masses of  . Wesson et al. (2010) show that the radius of dust shell may reach AU, and the region of the dust evaporated by the flash will expand in the shell as a light echo. The presence of narrow lines in spectra is the prime evidence of dense gas-and-dust medium. Ohsawa et al. (2010) observed NGC 300 OT with the IR camera of the AKARI satellite at  m on days 398 and 582 after the discovery and detected radiation of hot dust with temperatures 810 and 610 K, respectively.

Another calcium transient, PSN J17592296+0617267, was discovered in NGC 6509 (Kelly et al., 2011; Silverman et al., 2011).

Recently, a new object of such type, identified as PSN J14535395+0334049 in NGC 5775, was discovered by Howerton et al. (2012). It was detected by the Catalina Sky Survey (CSS) on 2012 March 27.49 UT at and was not seen in CSS data on March 17.39 to . Howerton et al. report that, besides the H line well fitted by a Lorentzian profile with FWHM km s, its spectrum contains CaII and [CaII] emission lines and also strong CaII H&K and NaI D absorptions. The spectrum resembles early-time spectra of SN 2008S and NGC 300 OT. The observed absolute magnitude of this object, , is consistent with those of the calcium transients. Additionally, Berger et al. (2012) found a potential progenitor in the image of NGC 5775 with the F625W filter in the HST ACS archive at the AB magnitude of . With the NGC 5775 distance, this corresponds to an absolute magnitude .

The nature of calcium-type transients and energy sources of their explosions are still disputable.

Fox et al. (2011) studied with Spitzer the remnants of 68 SNe IIn and found that 15 per cent of such objects displayed late-time emission of warm dust. The dust-shell properties indicate that the progenitor winds and mass-loss rates are most consistent with the properties of LBVs. An LBV has already been directly identified as a likely progenitor of SN 2005gl, and LBVs are considered likely progenitors of many other SNe IIn. So, dust-obscured LBVs may be progenitors of such transients and the LBV phenomenon is accompanied with great explosions. Recently, Rest et al. (2011), taking spectra of light echoes of  Car generated by its 19th-century Great Eruption, found it unexpectedly cool in the outburst, with the same calcium features.

Humphreys et al. (2011) argue that such transients are most likely evolved intermediate-mass stars in post-AGB or post-RGB transition to higher temperatures that had recently experienced large mass loss. Having shed a lot of mass, these stars are at the Eddington limit for their luminosities or close to it. Humphreys et al. think that the progenitors of these transients are not classical or normal LBV/S Dor variables, and although they have experienced "giant eruptions", these eruptions are not examples of the LBV giant eruptions. The progenitors of these transients are less luminous. Observations showed that these eruptions produced a cool dense envelope and a two-component bipolar outflow.

Kashi, Frankowski, and Soker (2010) suggest that most (but probably not all) intermediate-luminosity optical transients are accretion-powered events. The outbursts may be caused by tidal disruption in stellar approaches or by merging stars. These transients are expected to produce bipolar ejecta as a result of the geometry of the accretion process.

Fig. 1. The color image of the NGC 5775 transient, formed from BTA/SCORPIO , , and frames. The size of the image is . The comparison star is marked "1". Bottom right: an enlarged fragment of the star's environment, in size.

Having in mind the scientific interest in such objects, we have carried out observations of the NGC 5775 transient.

2. OBSERVATIONS AND DATA REDUCTION

The spectra and images of NGC 5775 OT were taken with the 6-m BTA telescope and SCORPIO focal reducer (Afanasiev & Moiseev, 2005) on 2012 April 25.

In the photometric mode, we obtained CCD frames with standard , , and Cousins filters. A color image based on these frames is shown in Fig. 1. It appears that the star is located at the front edge of the galactic disk, in a low-absorption region. Dark nebulae are located close to the star, to the north and south of it, but they do not cover the star. To perform relative photometry, we used the comparison star No. 1. Its SDSS position is 1453579, +33442 5, J2000.0, and its SDSS magnitudes are ). These magnitudes were transferred to magnitudes by interpolation using and AB magnitudes of Lyr calculated by Fukugita et al. (1996, Table 8). As a result, the magnitudes of the star 1 were derived as follows: (16.57, 16.01, 15.61). The measured magnitudes of NGC 5775 OT are , the mean Julian date of the observation is 2456043.40. The color indices are , ; the estimated uncertainties are mainly formed by inhomogeneities of surrounding background. The photometry available to date is collected in Table 1.

In the spectroscopic long-slit mode, the camera was equipped with a VPHG 1200G grism (the nominal spectral range  Å, resolution 5 Å, dispersion 0.88 Å per pixel). Due to technical problems, the observations were done without guiding. The spectra are noisy due to small exposures and insufficient signal accumulation. The signal-to-noise ratio in the continuum was about 5. During the observations, the seeing was estimated between 1 2 and 1 5. Spectra were reduced using standard ESO MIDAS procedures for the long-slit mode. Basic parameters of the spectra are given in Table 2.

Fig. 2. Spectra of NGC 5775 OT taken with BTA/SCORPIO. (a): The 600 s spectrum with the resolution of 5.4 Å. (b): The same spectrum smoothed with a Gaussian filter. (c): The 1200 s spectrum with the resolution 17 Å. (d): The same spectrum smoothed with a Gaussian filter.

To display general features of these noisy spectra, we smoothed them with a Gaussian filter, its width being  Å. The original and smoothed spectra are shown in Fig. 2.

Fig. 3. The H line profile. Two components of Gaussian approximation are also shown. The narrow component is red, the broad component is blue.

3. RESULTS

In the spectra ranged between and 5830Å, only the H line is seen well enough. There are no strong calcium lines in this range. In both smoothed spectra, H emission can also be identified. The spectrum of higher resolution reveals a two-component H profile (Fig. 3). It consists of a narrow component with FWHM  Å centered at  Å and a broad component with FWHM  Å centered at  Å. Taking into account the instrumental profile (FWHM = 5.4 Å), we have a half width of the narrow component about 300 km s. The FWHM of the broad one is about 4000 km s, and the total width of this component at zero level can be about 8600 km s. The radial velocity of the narrow component is  km s.

The radial velocity of the galaxy NGC 5775 is  km s (NED). The difference of  km s may be attributed to the galaxy's rotation. Using the new HST estimate of the Hubble constant, 73.8 km s Mpc (Riess et al., 2011), we find the distance to NGC 5775 to be 22.8 Mpc. With this distance and taking into account only the Galactic extinction of (NED), our brightness measurement corresponds to the absolute magnitude . This is a value typical of calcium transients.

In the color images of NGC 5775, it is visible that the star is surrounded with young population of blue stars and dark nebulae, located at the edge of the galactic disk where the star-forming rate is relatively high. No star-like object or HII region brighter than 24 is visible at the place of the explosion in the deep VLT/FORS frame taken on 2006 April 28. Balmer-line profiles that consist of narrow and broad components are sometimes observed in the spectra of SNe IIn. Ordinarily, broad components of SNe IIn display neither absorption details nor P Cyg profiles. Explaining similar structures of Balmer lines in SN IIn 1988Z, Chugai & Danziger (1994) suggested that the broad Balmer emission was formed by dynamic interaction of the expanding ejecta with a relatively rarefied circumstellar wind previously ejected by the progenitor. Narrow lines originate from the radiation-shocked dense wind component. Thus, the progenitor's wind either had a dense disk-like structure or there were dense clumps in a rarefied radially symmetric wind. Whatever the case, the progenitor underwent a stage of extensive mass loss before the explosion, and the star had a stage of super-Eddington mass outflow. The velocity of the ejecta measured in NGC 5775 OT, 4000 km s, is smaller than typical SN envelope velocities, and it is comparable to the velocities of the most rapid classical novae. The broad component of the H line does not have a P Cygni profile as distinct from profiles in spectra of SNe II or classical novae at maxima of their outbursts.

4. CONCLUSIONS

The results of the multicolor photometry and spectroscopy of the calcium-type transient PSN J14535395+0334049 in the galaxy NGC 5775 with the Russian 6-m telescope are reported. The star appeared in the edge region of the galaxy, rich in young stellar population and dark dust nebulae. Its absolute magnitude was at the time of the observation. The H line has a two-component profile containing a broad and a narrow emission components.

Acknowledgments.

We thank Dr. A.J. Drake for sending us a CSS frame of NGC 5775 OT for identification. This work was partly supported by a grant "Leading Scientific Schools of Russia" No. 4308.2012.2. The authors are also thankful to the administration of the Special Astrophysical Observatory of the Russian Academy of Sciences for assigning the 6-m telescope reserve time for this observation. The operation of the Russian 6-m telescope is financially supported by the Ministry of Science and Education of Russian Federation. This research has made use of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database (NED).

References:

Afanasiev, V.L. & Moiseev, A.V., 2005, Astronomy Letters, 31, 194

Berger, E., Soderberg, A.M., Chevalier, R.A., et al., 2009, Astrophys. J., 699, 1850

Berger, E., Marion, G.H., Hsao, E., et al., 2012, Astron. Telegram, No. 4009

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Table 1. Available photometry of NGC5775 OT
Date JD mag Filter Source
2006.04.28 2453853.74 24.1 VLT/FORS
2012.03.17 2456003.89 19.5 Howerton et al. (2012)
2012.03.27 2456013.99 18.7 Howerton et al. (2012)
2012.04.15 2456033 17.7 Drake, A.J., private comm.
2012.04.25 2456043.401 18.26 BTA/SCORPIO
2012.04.25 2456043.403 17.83 BTA/SCORPIO
2012.04.25 2456043.404 18.82 BTA/SCORPIO

Table 2. Spectra of NGC 5775 OT taken with BTA/SCORPIO
UT , Å Exposure, s S/N Resolution, Å
2012 Apr 25.912 4070 - 5828 1200 5.0 17
2012 Apr 25.966 4067 - 5830 600 5.3 5.4
Camera out-of-focus.





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