------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Astronomer's Telegram is free to read, free to publish, free to use.  Thanks to the support of our patrons, we can continue to keep it free. https://www.patreon.com/astronomerstel ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Astronomer's Telegram                   http://www.astronomerstelegram.org ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Posted: Within the last 24 hours ============================================================================== ATEL #16029     ATEL #16029 Title: LEIA detected a bright X-ray flare from 1RXS J054317.4-760222 Author: H. N. Yang, J. Q. Li, Z. X. Ling, Y. Liu, C. Zhang, D. Y. Li, H. Q. Cheng, C. Z. Cui, D. W. Fan, H. B. Hu, M. H. Huang, C. C. Jin, H. Y. Liu, M. J. Liu, H. Sun, H. W. Pan, W. X. Wang, Y. L. Wang, Q. Y. Wu, X. P. Xu, Y. F. Xu, M. Zhang, W. D. Zhang, D. H. Zhao and W. Yuan (NAOC, CAS), on behalf of the LEIA and Einstein Probe team Queries: ep_ta@bao.ac.cn Posted: 5 May 2023; 16:43 UT Subjects:X-ray, Variables We report a bright X-ray flare from 1RXS J054317.4-760222 detected by LEIA (Lobster Eye Imager for Astronomy). The position of the LEIA source is R.A. = 85.761 deg, DEC = -76.01 deg with an uncertainty of 2.2 arcmin (radius, 90%C.L. statistical and systematic), which is 118.7 arcseconds away from 1RXS J054317.4-760222. The source was observed twice by LEIA at 2023-05-03T07:11:44 and 2023-05-03T08:46:05, respectively, and it brightened within 2 hours. 1RXS J054317.4-760222 was detected by ROSAT with a flux of 8.4e-13 erg/s/cm2 in 0.1-2.4 keV, whose nature remains unclear. It was also covered by XMM-Newton Slew Survey with the highest flux of (2.8 +/- 1.3) e-12 erg/s/cm2 in 0.2-12 keV. As a comparison, the detected 0.5 - 4.0 keV flux by LEIA reached ~5e-11 erg/s/cm2. Thus LEIA has detected an X-ray flare of this source brighter than all of its previous observations by more than one order of magnitude. After the observation of LEIA, a follow-up ToO observation with Swift/XRT (obs ID: 00016010001, 900s exposure) at 2023/05/03T19:59:04 also detected this source, confirming its position to be consistent with 1RXS J054317.4-760222 (with an angular separation of 2 arcsec). The X-ray spectra can be fitted by a powerlaw with a photon index of 2.2 +/- 0.2 or an apec model with a plasma temperature of 1.3 +/- 0.1 keV (both modified by Galactic absorption), and its 0.5 - 4.0 keV flux was ~1.6e-12 erg/s/cm2. In the second ToO of Swift/XRT (obs ID: 00016010002, 3 ks exposure) taken at 2023/05/04T21:23:05, the X-ray flux of the source was found to have decayed by a factor of ~3 with respect to the first ToO observation. The X-ray spectrum can be fitted by a powerlaw with a photon index of 2.5 +/- 0.2 or an apec model with a plasma temperature of 2.3 +/- 0.6 (both modified by Galactic absorption), and its 0.5 - 4.0 keV flux was ~5e-13 erg/s/cm2. A decline in its optical/UV flux was also indicated by UVOT in these two ToO observations. Follow-up observations are encouraged to investigate the nature of 1RXS J054317.4-76022 in detail. We thank the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory team for making the X-ray observations possible. LEIA (Zhang et al. 2022, ApJL, 941, 2) is a soft X-ray Lobster-eye imager (0.5 - 4.0 keV) with a FoV of 340 square degrees aboard the experimental satellite SATech-01 of the CAS, launched on July 27, 2022. The above result is preliminary and the final result will be published elsewhere. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Password Certification: Yuan Liu (liuyuan@bao.ac.cn) https://www.astronomerstelegram.org/?read=16029