The nature of the fluorescent iron line in V 1486 Ori
S. Czesla, J.H.H.M. Schmitt

TL;DR
This study analyzes the X-ray spectrum of the young stellar object V1486 Ori, focusing on the variability of the fluorescent iron K-alpha line during flares, revealing insights into the source's environment and emission mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed time-resolved spectral analysis of the fluorescent iron line in V1486 Ori, highlighting its variability and challenging simple photoionization models.
Findings
Fluorescent iron K-alpha line appears mainly during the rise phase of a flare.
The spectrum shows high-temperature plasma with no detectable 6.7 keV Fe XXV feature during the second flare.
Photoionization alone cannot explain the fluorescent emission observed.
Abstract
The fluorescent 6.4 keV iron line provides information on cool material in the vicinity of hard X-ray sources as well as on the characteristics of the X-ray sources themselves. First discovered in the X-ray spectra of the flaring Sun, X-ray binaries and active galactic nuclei (AGN), the fluorescent line was also observed in a number of stellar X-ray sources. The young stellar object (YSO) V1486 Ori was observed in the framework of the Chandra Ultra Deep Project (COUP) as the source COUP 331. We investigate its spectrum, with emphasis on the strength and time variability of the fluorescent iron K-alpha line, derive and analyze the light curve of COUP 331 and proceed with a time-resolved spectral analysis of the observation. The light curve of V 1486 Ori shows two major flares, the first one lasting for (approx) 20 ks with a peak X-ray luminosity of 2.6*10^{32} erg/s (dereddened in the…
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