Iron lines from transient and persisting hot spots on AGN accretion disks
R. W. Goosmann (1,2), M. Mouchet (2,3), B. Czerny (2,4), M. Dovciak, (1), V. Karas (1), A. Rozanska (2,4), A.-M. Dumont (2) ((1) Astronomical, Institute, Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic, (2) Observatoire de, Paris, Meudon, France

TL;DR
This paper models the X-ray spectral evolution of hot spots caused by flares on AGN accretion disks, focusing on relativistic effects on iron K-line emission and how flare duration influences observed spectra.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed relativistic model of hot spot spectral evolution considering both persistent and transient flares on AGN disks, highlighting the impact of flare duration and position.
Findings
Spectral intensity increases towards edge-on angles, showing limb brightening.
Lightcurves exhibit asymmetry when flare duration is comparable to light travel time.
Future X-ray observatories can map azimuthal irradiation and probe the reflecting medium.
Abstract
[abridged] We model the X-ray reprocessing from a strong co-rotating flare above an accretion disk in active galactic nuclei. We explore the horizontal structure and evolution of the underlying hot spot. To obtain the spectral evolution seen by a distant observer, we apply a general relativity ray-tracing technique. We concentrate on the energy band around the iron K-line, where the relativistic effects are most pronounced. Persistent flares lasting for a significant fraction of the orbital time scale and short, transient flares are considered. In our time-resolved analysis, the spectra recorded by a distant observer depend on the position of the flare/spot with respect to the central black hole. If the flare duration significantly exceeds the light travel time across the spot, then the spot horizontal stratification is unimportant. On the other hand, if the flare duration is comparable…
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