Discovery of transient infrared emission from dust heated by stellar tidal disruption flares
Sjoert van Velzen, Alexander J. Mendez, Julian H. Krolik, and Varoujan, Gorjian

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of transient infrared emission from dust heated by stellar tidal disruption flares, providing new insights into the dust environment near supermassive black holes and estimating flare luminosities.
Contribution
It is the first to detect and analyze dust reprocessing of tidal disruption flares in non-active galaxy nuclei using WISE infrared data.
Findings
Infrared emission from dust heated by tidal flares was observed.
The hot dust is located about 0.1 parsecs from the black hole.
Estimated bolometric flare luminosity is approximately 8×10^44 erg/s.
Abstract
Stars that pass within the Roche radius of a supermassive black hole will be tidally disrupted, yielding a sudden injection of gas close to the black hole horizon which produces an electromagnetic flare. A few dozen of these flares have been discovered in recent years, but current observations provide poor constraints on the bolometric luminosity and total accreted mass of these events. Using images from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), we have discovered transient 3.4 micron emission from several previously known tidal disruption flares. The observations can be explained by dust heated to its sublimation temperature due to the intense radiation of the tidal flare. From the break in the infrared light curve we infer that this hot dust is located ~0.1 pc from the supermassive black hole. Since the dust has been heated by absorbing UV and (potentially) soft X-ray photons of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
