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TOPIC: Luminous Transient in NGC 300


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RE: Luminous Transient in NGC 300
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Title: The 2008 Luminous Optical Transient in the Nearby Galaxy NGC 300
Authors: Howard E. Bond (1), Alceste Z. Bonanos (1), Roberta M. Humphreys (2), L.A.G. Berto Monard (3), Jose L. Prieto (4), Frederick M. Walter (5) ((1) STScI, (2) U. Minnesota, (3) Bronberg Obs., (4) Ohio State U., (5) Stony Brook U.)

A luminous optical transient (OT) that appeared in NGC 300 in early 2008 had a maximum brightness, Mv ~ -13, intermediate between classical novae and supernovae. We present ground-based photometric and spectroscopic monitoring and adaptive-optics imaging of the OT, as well as pre- and post-outburst space-based imaging with HST and Spitzer. The optical spectrum at maximum showed an F-type supergiant photosphere with superposed emission lines of hydrogen, Ca II, and [Ca II], similar to the spectra of low-luminosity Type IIn "supernova impostors" like SN 2008S, as well as cool hypergiants like IRC +10420. The emission lines have a complex, double structure, indicating a bipolar outflow with velocities of ~75 km/s. The energy released in the eruption was ~2 x 10^47 ergs, most of it emitted in the first 2 months. By registering new HST images with deep archival frames, we have precisely located the OT site, and find no detectable optical progenitor brighter than broad-band V magnitude 28.5. However, archival Spitzer images reveal a bright, non-variable mid-IR pre-outburst source. We conclude that the NGC 300 OT was a heavily dust-enshrouded luminous star, of ~10-15 Msun, which experienced an eruption that cleared the surrounding dust and initiated a bipolar wind. The progenitor was likely an OH/IR source which had begun to evolve on a blue loop toward higher temperatures, but the precise cause of the outburst remains uncertain.

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Luminous Transient.kmz
Google Sky file  (1kb, kmz)

Position(2000): RA: 00 54 34.16 , Dec: -37 38 28.6

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A magnitude 16.5 optical transient was discovered  in the spiral galaxy NGC 300,  on  April 24th, 2008, by Berto Monard  of  South Africa.
The object  is currently at magnitude 14.
Spectroscopic observations by H.E. Bond (STScI), F.M. Walter (Stony Brook U.), and J. Velasquez (CTIO) suggest that the object has not a typical nova or  supernova  profile.

Position(2000): RA: 00 54 34.16 , Dec: -37 38 28.6

IAUC 8946 (Subscription)

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