This paper continues the study of the properties of an accretion disc
rotating around a non-baryonic (assumed super-massive) compact object. This
kind of objects, generically known as boson stars, were earlier proposed as a
possible alternative scenario to the existence of super-masive black holes in
the center of every galaxy. A dilute boson star has also been proposed as a
large part of the non-baryonic dark matter, flattening galactic rotational
velocities curves. In this contribution, we compute the profile of the emission
lines of Iron; its shape has been for long known as a useful diagnosis of the
space-time geometry. We compare with the case of a Schwarzschild black hole,
concluding that the differences are observationally distinguishable.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figure