INTEGRAL discovery of a high-energy tail in the microquasar Cygnus X-3
F. Cangemi, J. Rodriguez, V. Grinberg, R. Belmont, P. Laurent, J., Wilms

TL;DR
This study uses 16 years of INTEGRAL data to detect a high-energy tail in Cygnus X-3's spectrum, revealing non-thermal emission components and electron acceleration linked to jet activity.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed detection and analysis of a high-energy tail in Cygnus X-3 using long-term, state-resolved spectral data from INTEGRAL.
Findings
Detection of >50 keV component in hard states
Evidence of efficient electron acceleration during ejections
Photon index varies with orbital modulation in FIM state
Abstract
The X-ray spectra of X-ray binaries are dominated by emission of either soft or hard X-rays which defines their soft and hard spectral states. Cygnus X-3 is amongst the list of X-ray binaries that show quite complex behavior, with various distinct spectral states. Because of its softness and intrinsic low flux above typically 50 keV, very little is known about the hard X/soft gamma-ray (100-1000 keV) emission in Cygnus X-3. Using the whole INTEGRAL data base, we aim to explore the 3-1000 keV spectra of Cygnus X-3. This allows to probe this region with the highest sensitivity ever, and search for the potential signature of a high-energy non-thermal component as sometimes seen in other sources. Our work is based on state classification carried out in previous studies with data from the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer. We extend this classification to the whole INTEGRAL data set and perform a…
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