On the origin of the hard X-ray tail in neutron-star X-ray binaries
P. Reig (FORTH, U. of Crete), N. Kylafis (U. of Crete, FORTH)

TL;DR
This paper presents a jet model that explains the hard X-ray tail in neutron-star X-ray binaries, showing that the tail's spectral properties can be reproduced without a high-energy cutoff, similar to black-hole systems.
Contribution
The study develops a Monte Carlo jet model that reproduces the observed power-law X-ray spectra in neutron-star binaries, highlighting the jet's role in spectral formation.
Findings
Jet model explains photon index range 1.8-3 in neutron-star binaries.
High-energy cutoff shifted above ~300 keV, producing a pure power law.
Spectral break frequency in neutron-star binaries predicted to be lower than in black-hole binaries.
Abstract
Neutron star X-ray binaries emit a compact, optically thick, relativistic radio jet during low-luminosity, usually hard states, as Galactic black-hole X-ray binaries do. When radio emission is bright, a hard power-law tail without evidence for an exponential cutoff is observed in most systems. We have developed a jet model that explains many spectral and timing properties of black-hole binaries in the states where a jet is present. Our goal is to investigate whether our jet model can reproduce the hard tail, with the correct range of photon index and the absence of a high-energy cutoff, in neutron-star X-ray binaries. We have performed Monte Carlo simulations of the Compton upscattering of soft, accretion-disk or boundary layer photons, in the jet and computed the emergent energy spectra, as well as the time lag of hard photons with respect to softer ones as a function of Fourier…
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