Context: In the hunt for rare time-domain events, it is important to consider confusing exotic extragalactic phenomena with more common Galactic foreground events. Aims: We show how observations from multiple wavebands, in this case optical and X-ray observations, can be used to facilitate the distinction between the two. Methods: We discovered an extremely bright and rapid transient event during optical observations of the M 31 galaxy taken by the intermediate Palomar Transient Factory (iPTF). The persistent optical counterpart of this transient was previously thought to be a variable star in M 31 without any dramatic flux excursions. The iPTF event initially appeared to be an extraordinarily rapid and energetic extragalactic transient, which had a ≈3 mag positive flux excursion in less than a kilosecond; one of the exciting possibilities was this event could be a very fast nova in M 31. The nature of the source was resolved with the help of Chandra archival data, where we found an X-ray counterpart and obtained its X-ray spectrum. Results: We find the X-ray spectrum of the quiescent emission can be described by a model of optically thin plasma emission with a temperature of ≈7 MK, typical for coronal emission from an active star. The combination of the X-ray luminosity, which is calculated assuming the source is located in M 31 (∼3 × 1036 erg s−1), and the color temperature exclude any type of known accreting compact object or active star in M 31. We argue instead that the optical transient source is an M-type main-sequence, active star located in the disk of the Milky Way at a distance of ∼0.5-1 kpc. Its persistent X-ray luminosity is in the ≈1.3-5 × 1030 erg s−1 range and it has the absolute optical magnitude of 9.5-11.0 mag in the R band. The observed optical flare has the equivalent duration of ≈95 min and total energy of ≈(0.3-1) × 1035 erg in the R band, which places it among the brightest flares ever observed from an M-type star. This case can serve as an example for the classification of Galactic and extragalactic events in upcoming high-cadence time-domain projects, such as the Zwicky Transient Facility and the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope.
CITATION STYLE
Soraisam, M. D., Gilfanov, M., Kupfer, T., Prince, T. A., Masci, F., Laher, R. R., & Kong, A. K. H. (2018). Multiwavelength approach to classifying transient events in the direction of M 31. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 615. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201732068
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