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Once-ionized helium in superstrong magnetic fields
It is generally believed that magnetic fields of some neutron stars, the
so-called magnetars, are enormously strong, up to 10^{14} - 10^{15} G. Recent
investigations have shown that the atmospheres of magnetars are possibly
composed of helium. We calculate the structure and bound-bound radiative
transitions of the He^+ ion in superstrong fields, including the effects caused
by the coupling of the ion's internal degrees of freedom to its center-of-mass
motion. We show that He^+ in superstrong magnetic fields can produce spectral
lines with energies of up to about 3 keV, and it may be responsible for
absorption features detected recently in the soft X-ray spectra of several
radio-quiet isolated neutron stars. Quantization of the ion's motion across a
magnetic field results in a fine structure of spectral lines, with a typical
spacing of tens electron-volts in magnetar-scale fields. It also gives rise to
ion cyclotron transitions, whose energies and oscillator strengths depend on
the state of the bound ion.Comment: 12 pages, including 3 figures. Submitted to ApJ Letters (revised
version
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