Models of magnetized neutron star atmospheres: thin atmospheres and partially ionized hydrogen atmospheres with vacuum polarization
V. F. Suleimanov (IAAT, Tuebingen, Germany; Kazan State University,, Russia), A. Y. Potekhin (Ioffe Physical-Technical Institute, St. Petersburg,, Russia), K. Werner (IAAT, Tuebingen, Germany)

TL;DR
This paper develops models of magnetized neutron star atmospheres, including thin and partially ionized hydrogen atmospheres with vacuum polarization, to better interpret observed X-ray spectra and neutron star parameters.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive computer code for modeling various neutron star atmosphere configurations, incorporating vacuum polarization and mode conversion effects.
Findings
Thin partially ionized hydrogen atmospheres improve spectral fits.
Vacuum polarization effects are significant in modeling spectra.
The 'sandwich' atmosphere model offers new insights into neutron star spectra.
Abstract
Observed X-ray spectra of some isolated magnetized neutron stars display absorption features, sometimes interpreted as ion cyclotron lines. Modeling the observed spectra is necessary to check this hypothesis and to evaluate neutron star parameters.We develop a computer code for modeling magnetized neutron star atmospheres in a wide range of magnetic fields (10^{12} - 10^{15} G) and effective temperatures (3 \times 10^5 - 10^7 K). Using this code, we study the possibilities to explain the soft X-ray spectra of isolated neutron stars by different atmosphere models. The atmosphere is assumed to consist either of fully ionized electron-ion plasmas or of partially ionized hydrogen. Vacuum resonance and partial mode conversion are taken into account. Any inclination of the magnetic field relative to the stellar surface is allowed. We use modern opacities of fully or partially ionized plasmas…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
