The MeV spectral tail in Cyg X-1 and optically-thin emission of jets
Andrzej A. Zdziarski, Piotr Lubinski, Marek Sikora

TL;DR
This study analyzes the high-energy spectrum of Cyg X-1, exploring whether the observed MeV tail originates from jet synchrotron emission or hybrid Comptonization, and develops formalism to model jet emission constraints.
Contribution
It introduces a formalism for calculating optically-thin jet emission and constrains jet parameters, evaluating the jet's role in producing the MeV tail in Cyg X-1.
Findings
The MeV tail could be due to jet synchrotron emission with hard electron acceleration.
Jet base magnetic field estimated around 10^4 G and located at ~10^3 gravitational radii.
For p>2, the tail is likely from hybrid Comptonization, not jet synchrotron.
Abstract
We study the average X-ray and soft gamma-ray spectrum of Cyg X-1 in the hard spectral state, using data from INTEGRAL. We compare these results with those from CGRO, and find a good agreement. Confirming previous studies, we find the presence of a high-energy MeV tail beyond a thermal-Comptonization spectrum; however, the tail is much softer and weaker than that recently published by Laurent et al. In spite of this difference, the observed high-energy tail could still be due to the synchrotron emission of the jet of Cyg X-1, as claimed by Laurent et al. To test this possibility, we study optically-thin synchrotron and self-Compton emission from partially self-absorbed jets. We develop formalisms for calculating both emission of the jet base (which we define here as the region where the jet starts its emission) and emission of the entire jet. We require the emission to match that…
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