AstroNote 2020-158

Primary tabs

DRAFT
2020-08-19 12:15:14
Type: Object/s-Discovery/Classification
ATLAS20xrs (AT2020rqk): discovery of a candidate SN in UGC 10157 (100 Mpc)
Authors: K. W. Smith, S. Srivastav, O. McBrien, S. J. Smartt, J. Gillanders, P. Clark, M. Fulton, D. O'Neill, D. R. Young, M. McCollum (Queen's University Belfast), T.-W. Chen (Stockholm), J. Anderson (ESO), L. Denneau, A. Heinze, J. Tonry, H. Weiland (IfA, University of Hawaii), B. Stalder (LSST), A. Rest (STScI), D. E. Wright (University of Minnesota)
Source Group: ATLAS
Keywords: Supernova
Abstract:
Here we report the ATLAS discovery of the transient ATLAS20xrs (AT2020rqk) in galaxy UGC 10157. At a distance of 100 Mpc, the transient was discovered on MJD = 59080.25 (2020-08-19.25), m_c = 17.9, implying an absolute magnitude of M = -17.14 +/- 0.10. It showed a 2.5 mag rise in 4 days.

ATLAS is a twin 0.5m telescope system on Haleakala and Mauna Loa which is robotically surveying the sky above declination -40 with a cadence of 2 days (Tonry et al. 2018, PASP,130:064505). Two filters are used, cyan and orange (denoted c and o; all mags quoted are in the AB system). While carrying out the primary mission for Near Earth Objects, we search for and publicly report stationary transients to the IAU Transient Name Server.  Data processing is carried out at Queen's University which combines automated source parameter filtering, machine learning image recognition, and spatial cross-matching with astronomical catalogues (Smith et al. 2020, PASP, 132:085002). More information is on the ATLAS homepage. We are submitting AstroNotes for transients that are either within 100 Mpc, or have some other interesting feature to bring to the community's attention, such as bright nuclear transients, slowly rising or rapidly fading objects.

We report a new transient source, most likely a supernova in the galaxy UGC 10157. We discovered ATLAS20xrs (AT2020rqk) on MJD 59080.25 == 2020-08-19.25, at m_c = 17.94 +/- 0.10. There was no detection by ATLAS on MJD 59074.33 == 2020-08-13.33. ATLAS20xrs is offset by 12.2 arcsec north, 2.5 arcsec west from UGC 10157, which is at z = 0.0239 or d = 100 Mpc (from NED), implying an absolute magnitude of M = -17.14 (assuming m-M = 35.00 and A_g = 0.10 and A_r = 0.07). Followup observations are encouraged.  It showed a 2.5 mag rise in 4 days (see forced photometry plot attached). 

This work has made use of data from the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) project. ATLAS is primarily funded to search for near earth asteroids through NASA grants NN12AR55G, 80NSSC18K0284, and 80NSSC18K1575; byproducts of the NEO search include images and catalogs from the survey area.  The ATLAS science products have been made possible through the contributions of the University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy, the Queen's University Belfast, and the Space Telescope Science Institute. 

Show current TNS values
CatalogNameReported RAReported DECReported Obj-TypeReported RedshiftHost NameHost RedshiftRemarksTNS RATNS DECTNS Obj-TypeTNS Redshift
TNS2020rqk [ATLAS20xrs]16:00:58.417+70:36:15.210.023916:00:58.450+70:36:15.05SN Ia