459 research outputs found
The origin of long soft lags and the nature of the hard-intermediate state in black hole binaries
Fast variability of the X-ray corona in black hole binaries can produce a
soft lag by reverberation, where the reprocessed thermalized disc photons lag
behind the illuminating hard X-rays. This lag is small, and systematically
decreases with increasing mass accretion rate towards the hard-soft transition,
consistent with a decreasing truncation radius between the thin disc and X-ray
hot inner flow. However, the soft lag suddenly increases dramatically just
before the spectrum becomes disc-dominated (hard-intermediate state).
Interpreting this as reverberation requires that the X-ray source distance from
the disc increases dramatically, potentially consistent with switching to
X-rays produced in the radio jet. However, this change in lag behaviour occurs
without any clear change in hard X-ray spectrum, and before the plasmoid
ejection event which might produce such a source (soft-intermediate state).
Instead, we show how the soft lag can be interpreted in the context of
propagation lags from mass accretion rate fluctuations. These normally produce
hard lags, as the model has radial stratification, with fluctuations from
larger radii modulating the harder spectra produced at smaller radii. However,
all that is required to switch the sign is that the hottest Comptonized
emission has seed photons which allow it to extend down in energy below the
softer emission from the slower variable turbulent region from the inner edge
of the disc. Our model connects the timing change to the spectral change, and
gives a smooth transition of the X-ray source properties from the bright hard
state to the disc-dominated states.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
THE ASTRO-H MISSION
A review of the Astro-H mission is presented here on behalf of the Astro-H collaboration. The joint JAXA/NASA ASTRO-H mission is the sixth in a series of highly successful X-ray missions initiated by the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS). One of the main uniquenesses of the ASTRO-H satellite is the high sensitivity and imaging capability of the wide energy band from 0.3 keV to 600 keV. The coverage is achieved by combining the four instruments of the SXS, SXI, HXI, and SGD. The other main uniqueness is a spectroscopic capability not only for a point-like source but also for an extended source with high spectral resolution of ΔE~4÷7eV of SXS. Using the unique powers of these instruments, ASTRO-H will address unresolved issues in high-energy astrophysics
Suzaku Discovery of a Hard X-Ray Tail in the Persistent Spectra from the Magnetar 1E 1547.0-5408 during its 2009 Activity
The fastest-rotating magnetar 1E 1547.0-5408 was observed in broad-band
X-rays with Suzaku for 33 ks on 2009 January 28-29, 7 days after the onset of
its latest bursting activity. After removing burst events, the
absorption-uncorrected 2-10 keV flux of the persistent emission was measured
with the XIS as 5.7e-11 ergs cm-2 s-1, which is 1-2 orders of magnitude higher
than was measured in 2006 and 2007 when the source was less active. The
persistent emission was also detected significantly with the HXD in >10 keV up
to at least ~110 keV, with an even higher flux of 1.3e-10 ergs cm-2 s-1 in
20-100 keV. The pulsation was detected at least up to 70 keV at a period of
2.072135+/-0.00005 s, with a deeper modulation than was measured in a fainter
state. The phase-averaged 0.7-114 keV spectrum was reproduced by an absorbed
blackbody emission with a temperature of 0.65+/-0.02 keV, plus a hard power-law
with a photon index of ~1.5. At a distance of 9 kpc, the bolometric luminosity
of the blackbody and the 2-100 keV luminosity of the hard power-law are
estimated as (6.2+/-1.2)e+35 ergs s-1 and 1.9e+36 ergs s-1, respectively, while
the blackbody radius becomes ~5 km. Although the source had not been detected
significantly in hard X-rays during the past fainter states, a comparison of
the present and past spectra in energies below 10 keV suggests that the hard
component is more enhanced than the soft X-ray component during the persistent
activity.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, PASJ Vol.62 No.2 accepte
Prospect for Future MeV Gamma-ray Active Galactic Nuclei Population Studies
While the X-ray, GeV gamma-ray, and TeV gamma-ray skies have been extensively
studied, the MeV gamma-ray sky is not well investigated after the Imaging
Compton Telescope (COMPTEL) scanned the sky about two decades ago. In this
paper, we investigate prospects for active galactic nuclei population studies
with future MeV gamma-ray missions using recent spectral models and luminosity
functions of Seyfert and flat spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs). Both of them are
plausible candidates as the origins of the cosmic MeV gamma-ray background. If
the cosmic MeV gamma-ray background radiation is dominated by non-thermal
emission from Seyferts, the sensitivity of 10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1 is required to
detect several hundred Seyferts in the entire sky. If FSRQs make up the cosmic
MeV gamma-ray background, the sensitivity of ~4 x 10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1 is
required to detect several hundred FSRQs following the recent FSRQ X-ray
luminosity function. However, based on the latest FSRQ gamma-ray luminosity
function, with which FSRQs can explain up to ~30% of the MeV background, we can
expect several hundred FSRQs even with the sensitivity of 10^-11 erg cm^-2 s^-1
which is almost the same as the sensitivity goal of the next generation MeV
telescopes.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
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