Infrared observations reveal the reprocessing envelope in the tidal disruption event AT 2019azh
Thomas M. Reynolds, Lars Thomsen, Seppo Mattila, Takashi Nagao, Joseph P. Anderson, Franz E. Bauer, Panos Charalampopoulos, Lixin Dai, Sara Faris, Mariusz Gromadzki, Claudia P. Guti\'errez, Hanin Kuncarayakti, Cosimo Inserra, Erkki Kankare, Timo Kravtsov, Shane Moran

TL;DR
Infrared observations of TDE AT 2019azh reveal a reprocessing envelope, showing that early IR excess can distinguish between dust emission and non-thermal processes, informing models of TDEs.
Contribution
This study provides the first detailed IR observational analysis of a TDE, demonstrating the importance of early IR data in understanding reprocessing envelopes and viewing angles.
Findings
IR data at maximum light cannot be fit with dust emission alone.
IR excess is better explained by a reprocessing model with free-free opacity.
Later IR emission is consistent with cool dust in a distant, clumpy envelope.
Abstract
Tidal disruption events (TDEs) are expected to release much of their energy in the far-ultraviolet (UV), which we do not observe directly. However, infrared (IR) observations can observe re-radiation of the optical/UV emission from dust, and if this dust is observed in the process of sublimation, we can infer the un-observed UV radiated energy. TDEs have also been predicted to show spectra shallower than a blackbody in the IR, but this has not yet been observed. We present near/mid-IR observations of the TDE AT 2019azh spanning from -3 d before peak until >1750 d after. We evaluate these observations for consistency with dust emission or direct emission from the TDE. We fit the IR data with a modified blackbody associated with dust emission. The UV+optical+IR data are compared with simulated spectra produced from general relativistic radiation magnetohydrodynamics simulations of…
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