9 research outputs found
Measuring Black Hole Spin using X-ray Reflection Spectroscopy
I review the current status of X-ray reflection (a.k.a. broad iron line)
based black hole spin measurements. This is a powerful technique that allows us
to measure robust black hole spins across the mass range, from the stellar-mass
black holes in X-ray binaries to the supermassive black holes in active
galactic nuclei. After describing the basic assumptions of this approach, I lay
out the detailed methodology focusing on "best practices" that have been found
necessary to obtain robust results. Reflecting my own biases, this review is
slanted towards a discussion of supermassive black hole (SMBH) spin in active
galactic nuclei (AGN). Pulling together all of the available XMM-Newton and
Suzaku results from the literature that satisfy objective quality control
criteria, it is clear that a large fraction of SMBHs are rapidly-spinning,
although there are tentative hints of a more slowly spinning population at high
(M>5*10^7Msun) and low (M<2*10^6Msun) mass. I also engage in a brief review of
the spins of stellar-mass black holes in X-ray binaries. In general,
reflection-based and continuum-fitting based spin measures are in agreement,
although there remain two objects (GROJ1655-40 and 4U1543-475) for which that
is not true. I end this review by discussing the exciting frontier of
relativistic reverberation, particularly the discovery of broad iron line
reverberation in XMM-Newton data for the Seyfert galaxies NGC4151, NGC7314 and
MCG-5-23-16. As well as confirming the basic paradigm of relativistic disk
reflection, this detection of reverberation demonstrates that future large-area
X-ray observatories such as LOFT will make tremendous progress in studies of
strong gravity using relativistic reverberation in AGN.Comment: 19 pages. To appear in proceedings of the ISSI-Bern workshop on "The
Physics of Accretion onto Black Holes" (8-12 Oct 2012). Revised version adds
a missing source to Table 1 and Fig.6 (IRAS13224-3809) and corrects the
referencing of the discovery of soft lags in 1H0707-495 (which were in fact
first reported in Fabian et al. 2009
Iron K alpha line of Proca stars
X-ray reflection spectroscopy can be a powerful tool to test the nature of astrophysical black holes. Extending previous work on Kerr black holes with scalar hair [1] and on boson stars [2], here we study whether astrophysical black hole candidates may be horizonless, self-gravitating, vector Bose-Einstein condensates, known as Proca stars [3]. We find that observations with current X-ray missions can only provide weak constraints and rule out solely Proca stars with low compactness. There are two reasons. First, at the moment we do not know the geometry of the corona, and therefore the uncertainty in the emissivity pro file limits the ability to constrain the background metric. Second, the photon number count is low even in the case of a bright black hole binary, and we cannot have a precise measurement of the spectrum
Hitomi constraints on the 3.5 keV Line in the Perseus galaxy cluster
High-resolution X-ray spectroscopy with Hitomi was expected to resolve
the origin of the faint unidentified E≈ 3.5 {keV} emission line
reported in several low-resolution studies of various massive systems,
such as galaxies and clusters, including the Perseus cluster. We have
analyzed the Hitomi first-light observation of the Perseus cluster. The
emission line expected for Perseus based on the XMM-Newton signal from
the large cluster sample under the dark matter decay scenario is too
faint to be detectable in the Hitomi data. However, the previously
reported 3.5 keV flux from Perseus was anomalously high compared to the
sample-based prediction. We find no unidentified line at the reported
high flux level. Taking into account the XMM measurement uncertainties
for this region, the inconsistency with Hitomi is at a 99% significance
for a broad dark matter line and at 99.7% for a narrow line from the
gas. We do not find anomalously high fluxes of the nearby faint K line
or the Ar satellite line that were proposed as explanations for the
earlier 3.5 keV detections. We do find a hint of a broad excess near the
energies of high-n transitions of S xvi (E≃ 3.44 {keV}
rest-frame)—a possible signature of charge exchange in the
molecular nebula and another proposed explanation for the unidentified
line. While its energy is consistent with XMM pn detections, it is
unlikely to explain the MOS signal. A confirmation of this interesting
feature has to wait for a more sensitive observation with a future
calorimeter experiment