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Article overview
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Fe Kalpha emission from photoionized slabs: the impact of the iron abundance | D.R. Ballantyne
; A.C. Fabian
; R.R. Ross
; | Date: |
7 Dec 2001 | Journal: | Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 329 (2002) L67 | Subject: | astro-ph | Affiliation: | IoA, Cambridge College of the Holy Cross | Abstract: | Iron Kalpha emission from photoionized and optically thick material is observed in a variety of astrophysical environments including X-ray binaries, active galactic nuclei, and possibly gamma-ray bursts. This paper presents calculations showing how the equivalent width (EW) of the Fe K line depends on the iron abundance of the illuminated gas and its ionization state -- two variables subject to significant cosmic scatter. Reflection spectra from a constant density slab which is illuminated with a power-law spectrum with photon-index Gamma are computed using the code of Ross & Fabian. When the Fe K EW is measured from the reflection spectra alone, we find that it can reach values greater than 6 keV if the Fe abundance is about 10 times solar and the illuminated gas is neutral. EWs of about 1 keV are obtained when the gas is ionized. In contrast, when the EW is measured from the incident+reflected spectrum, the largest EWs are ~800 keV and are found when the gas is ionized. When Gamma is increased, the Fe K line generally weakens, but significant emission can persist to larger ionization parameters. The iron abundance has its greatest impact on the EW when it is less than 5 times solar. When the abundance is further increased, the line strengthens only marginally. Therefore, we conclude that Fe K lines with EWs much greater than 800 eV are unlikely to be produced by gas with a supersolar Fe abundance. These results should be useful in interpreting Fe K emission whenever it arises from optically thick fluorescence. | Source: | arXiv, astro-ph/0112179 | Services: | Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites |
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