We present the Spectral Energy Distribution of HR 4049 based on literature
data and new continuum measurements at 850 micron. The SED shows variable
absorption in the UV, and a large IR excess, both caused by circumstellar dust.
The shape of the IR excess from 1 micron all the way down to 850 micron can be
nearly perfectly fitted with a single blackbody function at T ~ 1150 K or
alternatively with a sum of blackbodies in a narrow temperature range. The
energy emitted in this IR continuum radiation is about one-third of the stellar
luminosity. We show that this blackbody radiation must be due to the presence
of a circumbinary disk with a large height. This disk must also be gas-rich, in
agreement with the observations of molecular bands in the ISO-SWS spectrum. We
present two possible scenario's for explaining the shape and the intensity of
the IR excess. The first scenario involves large grains (a >1 mm) that each
radiate like a blackbody. The second scenario argues that the blackbody
radiation is due to a very optically thick circumbinary disk. We investigate if
such a disk would indeed produce blackbody radiation by presenting results from
radiative transfer calculations. We further quantify the properties of such a
disk and its stability in the framework of (hydro)dynamics, grain settling,
radiation pressure and grain drift. The virtues and shortcomings of both models
for the origin of the IR blackbody are discussed by contrasting them with other
observations and assessing them in the framework of (binary) (post-)AGB
evolution.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&