Abstract

While SN impostors resemble the Great Eruption of eta Car in the sense that their spectra show narrow H lines and they have typical peak absolute magnitudes of -13 to -14 mag, most extragalactic events observed so far are quite different from eta Car in duration. Their bright phases typically last for 100~d or less, rather than persisting for several years. The transient object UGC2773-OT had a similar peak absolute magnitude to other SN impostors, but with a gradual 5-yr prediscovery rise. In the 6 yr since discovery, it has faded very slowly (0.26 mag/yr). Overall, we suggest that its decade-long eruption is so far the best known analog of eta Car's 19th century eruption. We discuss extensive spectroscopy of the ongoing eruption. The spectra show interesting changes in velocity and line shape that we discuss in detail, including an asymmetric Halpha emission line that we show is consistent with the ejection of a bipolar nebula that could be very much like the Homunculus of eta Car. Moreover, changes in the line width, line profile, blue excess emission resembling that of Type IIn supernovae, and the intensity of Halpha suggest the presence of strong circumstellar interaction in the eruption at late times. This supports the hypothesis that the extended plateau of eta Car's eruption may have been powered by shock interaction as well. One interesting difference compared to eta Car, however, is that UGC2773-OT so far does not exhibit the repeated brief spikes in luminosity that have been associated with binary periastron events.

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