xion: reflected spectrum of photo-ionized accretion disk/ring
This model describes the reflected spectra of a photo-ionized accretion disk
or a ring if one so chooses. The approach is similar to the one used for
tables with stellar spectra. Namely, a large number of models are computed
for a range of values of the spectral index, the incident X-ray flux, disk
gravity, the thermal disk flux and iron abundance. Each model's output is
an un-smeared reflected spectrum for 5 different inclination angles ranging
from nearly pole-on to nearly face on, stored in a look-up table. The
default geometry is that of a lamppost, with free parameters of the model
being the height of the X-ray source above the disk, , the dimensionless
accretion rate through the disk, , the luminosity of the X-ray source,
, the inner and outer disk radii, and the spectral index. This defines
the gravity parameter, the ratio of X-ray to thermal fluxes, etc., for each
radius, which allows the use of a look-up table to approximate the reflected
spectrum. This procedure is repeated for about 30 different radii. The total
disk spectrum is then obtained by integrating over the disk surface,
including relativistic smearing of the spectrum for a non-rotating black
hole (e.g., Fabian 1989).
In addition, the geometry of a central sphere (with power-law optically thin
emissivity inside it) plus an outer cold disk, and the geometry of magnetic
flares are available (par13 = 2 and 3, respectively). One can also turn off
relativistic smearing to see what the local disk spectrum looks like
(par12 = 2 in this case; otherwise leave it at 4). In addition, par11 = 1
produces reflected plus direct spectrum/direct; par11 =2 produces
(incident + reflected)/incident [note that normalization of incident and
direct are different because of solid angles covered by the disk; 2 should
be used for magnetic flare model]; and par11 =3 produces reflected/incident.
Abundance is controlled by par9 and varies between 1 and 4 at the present.
A complete description of the model is presented in
Nayakshin & Kallman (2001).
par1 |
height of the source above the disk (in Schwarzschild radii) |
par2 |
ratio of the X-ray source luminosity to that of the disk |
par3 |
accretion rate (in Eddington units) |
par4 |
the inclination angle (1 = face-on) |
par5 |
inner radius of the disk (in Schwarzschild radii) |
par6 |
outer radius of the disk (in Schwarzschild radii) |
par7 |
photon index of the source |
par8 |
redshift z |
par9 |
Fe abundance relative to Solar (which is defined as
by number relative to H) |
par10 |
Exponential high energy cut-off energy for the source |
par11 |
1 (reflected+direct)/direct
2 (reflected+incident)/incident
3 reflected/incident |
par12 |
2 no relativistic smearing
4 relativistic smearing |
par13 |
1 lamppost
2 central hot sphere with outer cold disk
3 magnetic flares above a cold disk |
Note that setting par13 to 2 gives a central hot sphere with luminosity law
. The inner radius of the sphere is 3 Schwarzschild
radii and the outer radius is equal to par1. Only the case with par5
par1 has been tested so far.
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Last modified: Friday, 23-Aug-2024 13:20:40 EDT
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