Can the relativistic light bending model explain X-ray spectral variations of Seyfert galaxies?
Misaki Mizumoto, Kotaro Moriyama, Ken Ebisawa, Shin Mineshige, Norita, Kawanaka, Masahiro Tsujimoto

TL;DR
This study critically tests the relativistic light bending model for Seyfert galaxy X-ray spectral variations, finding inconsistencies with observed features and suggesting the model may not fully explain the phenomena.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed ray-tracing simulation of the light bending model, revealing limitations in explaining observed spectral and timing features of Seyfert galaxies.
Findings
Deep rms dip requires extreme iron overabundance
Lag amplitude consistent with normal iron abundance
High source height contradicts broad emission line features
Abstract
Many Seyfert galaxies are known to exhibit Fe-K broad emission line features in their X-ray energy spectra. The observed lines have three distinct features; (1) the line profiles are skewed and show significant low-energy tails, (2) the Fe-K band have low variability, which produces a broad and deep dip in the root-mean-square (rms) spectra, and (3) photons in this band have time lags behind those in the adjacent energy bands with amplitudes of several , where is the gravitational radius. The "relativistic light bending model" is proposed to explain these observed features, where a compact X-ray source (lamp post) above an extreme Kerr black hole illuminates the innermost area of the accretion disc. In this paper, we critically examine the relativistic light bending model by computing the rms spectra and the lag features using a ray-tracing technique, when a lamp post moves…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Advanced X-ray Imaging Techniques · History and Developments in Astronomy
