X-ray fluorescence from the inner disc in Cygnus X-l

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Abstract

The quasi-blackbody plus power-law spectra of many accreting black-hole sources suggests that relatively cold matter is surrounded by hard X-ray emitting plasma. Fluorescent iron lines are produced by X-irradiation of the cold gas. The shape and variability of these lines can be used to map the innermost regions around the black hole. In the case of a disc geometry for the cold gas, the effects of doppler-broadening and gravitational and transverse redshifts produce a characteristic line profile which depends upon inclination. We show here that the broad, iron emission line found in Cyg X-l by Barr, White & Page is well modelled by fluorescent emission from the inner parts of an accretion disc inclined at ~ 30 degrees. The mass of the central object and properties of the accretion flow can be determined by future higher resolution studies of this and similar sources, including Active Galaxies.

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APA

Fabian, A. C., Rees, M. J., Stella, L., & White, N. E. (1989). X-ray fluorescence from the inner disc in Cygnus X-l. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 238(3), 729–736. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/238.3.729

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