A toy model of dust rings in TDEs predicts brighter IR emission on-axis, explaining X-ray/IR correlations and enabling viewing-angle constraints from observed light curves.
Infrared emission from tidal disruption events --- probing the pc-scale dust content around galactic nuclei
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abstract
Recent UV-optical surveys have been successful in finding tidal disruption events (TDEs), in which a star is tidally disrupted by a supermassive black hole (BH). These TDEs release a huge amount of radiation energy ~ 10^51-52 erg into the circum-nuclear medium. If the medium is dusty, most of the radiation energy will be absorbed by dust grains within ~ 1 pc from the BH and re-radiated in the infrared. We calculate the dust emission lightcurve from a 1-D radiative transfer model, taking into account the time-dependent heating, cooling and sublimation of dust grains. We show that the dust emission peaks at 3-10 microns and has typical luminosities ~ 10^42-43 erg/s (with sky covering factor of dusty clouds ranging from 0.1-1). This is detectable by current generation of telescopes. In the near future, James Webb Space Telescope will be able to perform photometric and spectroscopic measurements, in which silicate or polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) features may be found. Observations at rest-frame wavelength > 2 microns have only been reported from two TDE candidates, SDSS J0952+2143 and Swift J1644+57. Although consistent with the dust emission from TDEs, the mid-infrared fluxes of the two events may be from other sources. Long-term monitoring is needed to draw a firm conclusion. We also point out two nearby TDE candidates (ASSASN-14ae and -14li) where the dust emission may be currently detectable. The dust infrared emission can give a snapshot of the pc-scale dust content around weakly- or non-active galactic nuclei, which is hard to probe otherwise.
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The properties of tidal disruption event infrared counterparts produced by dust rings and inference of the observing angle
A toy model of dust rings in TDEs predicts brighter IR emission on-axis, explaining X-ray/IR correlations and enabling viewing-angle constraints from observed light curves.