Numerical solution of the radiative transfer equation: X-ray spectral formation from cylindrical accretion onto a magnetized neutron star
R. Farinelli, C. Ceccobello, P. Romano, L. Titarchuk

TL;DR
This paper presents a new algorithm for solving the radiative transfer equation in accreting neutron star systems, enabling more accurate modeling of X-ray spectra considering thermal and bulk Comptonization effects.
Contribution
The authors developed a relaxation algorithm for the radiative transfer equation in two dimensions, implemented it in XSPEC, and tailored it for high magnetic field neutron star accretion scenarios.
Findings
Higher electron temperature and optical depth produce flatter spectra.
Spectral shape depends on velocity profile and accretion column radius.
The algorithm effectively models X-ray spectra in magnetized neutron star accretion.
Abstract
Predicting the emerging X-ray spectra in several astrophysical objects is of great importance, in particular when the observational data are compared with theoretical models. To this aim, we have developed an algorithm solving the radiative transfer equation in the Fokker-Planck approximation when both thermal and bulk Comptonization take place. The algorithm is essentially a relaxation method, where stable solutions are obtained when the system has reached its steady-state equilibrium. We obtained the solution of the radiative transfer equation in the two-dimensional domain defined by the photon energy E and optical depth of the system tau using finite-differences for the partial derivatives, and imposing specific boundary conditions for the solutions. We treated the case of cylindrical accretion onto a magnetized neutron star. We considered a blackbody seed spectrum of photons with…
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