@article{a2ebcf4060664141a52272881e1ddc23,
title = "Birth of a relativistic outflow in the unusual γ-ray transient Swift J164449.3+573451",
abstract = "Active galactic nuclei, which are powered by long-term accretion onto central supermassive black holes, produce relativistic jets with lifetimes of at least one million years, and the observation of the birth of such a jet is therefore unlikely. Transient accretion onto a supermassive black hole, for example through the tidal disruption of a stray star, thus offers a rare opportunity to study the birth of a relativistic jet. On 25 March 2011, an unusual transient source (Swift J164449.3+573451) was found, potentially representing such an accretion event. Here we report observations spanning centimetre to millimetre wavelengths and covering the first month of evolution of a luminous radio transient associated with Swift J164449.3+573451. The radio transient coincides with the nucleus of an inactive galaxy. We conclude that we are seeing a newly formed relativistic outflow, launched by transient accretion onto a million-solar-mass black hole. A relativistic outflow is not predicted in this situation, but we show that the tidal disruption of a star naturally explains the observed high-energy properties and radio luminosity and the inferred rate of such events. The weaker beaming in the radio-frequency spectrum relative to γ-rays or X-rays suggests that radio searches may uncover similar events out to redshifts of z ≈ 6.",
author = "Zauderer, {B. A.} and E. Berger and Soderberg, {A. M.} and A. Loeb and R. Narayan and Frail, {D. A.} and Petitpas, {G. R.} and A. Brunthaler and R. Chornock and Carpenter, {J. M.} and Pooley, {G. G.} and K. Mooley and Kulkarni, {S. R.} and R. Margutti and Fox, {D. B.} and E. Nakar and Patel, {N. A.} and Volgenau, {N. H.} and Culverhouse, {T. L.} and Bietenholz, {M. F.} and Rupen, {M. P.} and W. Max-Moerbeck and Readhead, {A. C.S.} and J. Richards and M. Shepherd and S. Storm and Hull, {C. L.H.}",
note = "Funding Information: Acknowledgements E.B. is supported in part by funds from NASA. A.L. is supported in part by NSF and NASA grants. R.M. acknowledges support from a Swift ASI grant and from the Ministry of Universities and Research of Italy. E.N. is partly supported by IRG and ISF grants. The EVLA and the Very LongBaseline Array are operated bytheNRAO, a facility of the NSF operated under cooperative agreement by the AUI. The SMA is a joint project between the SAO and the ASIAA, and is funded by the Smithsonian Institution and the Academia Sinica. CARMA development and operations are supported by the NSF under a cooperative agreement, and by the Associates of the California Institute of Technology, the Universityof Chicago and the states of California,IllinoisandMaryland. The AMI arrays are supported by the University of Cambridge and the STFC. This work is partly based on observations with the 100-m telescope of the MPIfR at Effelsberg.",
year = "2011",
month = aug,
day = "25",
doi = "https://doi.org/10.1038/nature10366",
language = "الإنجليزيّة",
volume = "476",
pages = "425--428",
journal = "Nature",
issn = "0028-0836",
publisher = "Nature Research",
number = "7361",
}