lumin
calculate luminosities
Calculate the luminosity of the current model for a given redshift and
source frame energy range.
Syntax: lumin [<lowEnergy>] [<hiEnergy>] [<redshift>] [err
<number><level>|noerr]
where <lowEnergy> and <hiEnergy> are the source frame energies
over which the luminosity is calculated and <redshift> is the
source redshift. Initial default values are 2 to 10 keV for 0 redshift.
The luminosity is given in units of ergs/s. The energy range redshifted
to the observed range must be contained by the range covered by the
current spectra (which determine the range over which the model is evaluated).
Values outside this range will be automatically reset to the extremes.
Note that the energy values are two separate arguments and are NOT connected
by a dash (see parameter ranges in the freeze command description).
The lumin will be calculated for all loaded spectra. If no spectra are
loaded (or none of the loaded spectra have a response), the model is
evaluated over the energy range determined by its dummy response.
(In XSPEC12, models are automatically assigned default dummy responses when
there is no data, so the dummyrsp command need not be given.) If more
than 1 model has been loaded, whichever model the user has specified to
be the active one for a given source is the one used for the lumin
calculation.
The results of a lumin command may be retrieved by the
tclout lumin <n> command where <n> is the
particular spectrum of interest. If lumin was calculated for
the case of no loaded spectra, the results can be retrieved by
tclout lumin with the <n> argument omitted.
The err/noerr switch sets whether errors will be estimated on the
luminosity. The error algorithm is to draw parameter values from the
distribution and calculate a luminosity. <number> of sets of
parameter values will be drawn. The resulting luminosities are ordered
and the central <level> percent selected to give the error range.
You can get the full array of simulated lumin values by calling tclout lumin
with the errsims option (see tclout command).
The parameter values distribution is assumed to be a multivariate Gaussian
centered on the best-fit parameters with sigmas from the covariance matrix.
This is only an approximation in the case that fit statistic space is not
quadratic.
There is also a model component clumin which can be used to
estimate luminosities and errors for part of the model. For instance, defining
the model as wabs(pow + clumin(ga)) provides a fit parameter which gives
the luminosity in the gaussian line.
Examples:
The current data have significant response to data within 1 to 18 keV.
XSPEC> lumin,,,0.5
//Calculate the current model luminosity over the default range
//for z=0.5
XSPEC> lumin 6.4 7.0
//Calculate the current luminosity over 6.4 to 7 keV.
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Last modified: Friday, 23-Aug-2024 13:20:40 EDT
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