Infrared emission from tidal disruption events --- probing the pc-scale dust content around galactic nuclei
Wenbin Lu (UT Austin), Pawan Kumar, Neal J. Evans II

TL;DR
This paper models infrared emission from dust heated by tidal disruption events to probe the dust content around galactic nuclei, predicting detectable signals with current and future telescopes, especially JWST.
Contribution
It introduces a 1-D radiative transfer model for dust emission in TDEs, predicting infrared signatures and their observability, advancing understanding of circumnuclear dust in galactic centers.
Findings
Infrared emission peaks at 3-10 microns with luminosities ~10^42-43 erg/s.
Current telescopes can detect these IR signals from TDEs.
Future JWST observations will identify spectral features like silicates and PAHs.
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…
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