On the spreading layer emission in luminous accreting neutron stars
Mikhail G. Revnivtsev (1), Valery F. Suleimanov (2,3), Juri Poutanen, (4) (1 - IKI, Moscow, Russia, 2 - IAAT, Tuebingen, Germany, 3 - KFU, Kazan,, Russia, 4 - University of Oulu, Finland)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the boundary layer emission in luminous accreting neutron stars, revealing a stable spectrum across large luminosity variations, supporting models of emission at the local Eddington limit.
Contribution
It provides the first spectral analysis of the boundary layer in a luminous neutron star across a wide luminosity range, confirming theoretical models of boundary layer emission.
Findings
Boundary layer spectrum remains stable over a factor of 20 luminosity variation.
Maximum color temperature of boundary layer emission is close to the Eddington limit.
Spectral shape is unaffected by changes in the size of the emitting region.
Abstract
Emission of the neutron star surface potentially contains information about its size and thus of vital importance for high energy astrophysics. In spite of the wealth of data on the emission of luminous accreting neutron stars, the emission of their surfaces is hard to disentangle from their time averaged spectra. A recent X-ray transient source XTE J1701-462 has provided a unique dataset covering the largest ever observed luminosity range for a single source. In this paper, we extract the spectrum of the boundary layer between the inner part of the accretion disc and the neutron star surface with the help of maximally spectral model-independent method. We show compelling evidences that the energy spectrum of the boundary layer stays virtually the same over factor of 20 variations of the source luminosity. It is rather wide and cannot be described by a single temperature blackbody…
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