Time Evolving Photo Ionisation Device (TEPID): a novel code for out-of-equilibrium gas ionisation
Alfredo Luminari, Fabrizio Nicastro, Yair Krongold, Luigi Piro,, Aishwarya Linesh Thakur

TL;DR
TEPID is a new computational tool that models the time-dependent ionisation of gas in astrophysical environments, enabling more accurate interpretation of spectra from variable sources like AGN and gamma-ray bursts.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent, time-evolving photoionisation code capable of simulating non-equilibrium gas responses to changing ionising sources.
Findings
Time-evolving ionisation patterns differ significantly from equilibrium models.
TEPID can simulate spectra for diverse astrophysical scenarios.
The code is relevant for upcoming high-resolution X-ray missions.
Abstract
Photoionisation is one of the main mechanisms at work in the gaseous environment of bright astrophysical sources. Many information on the gas physics, chemistry and kinematics, as well as on the ionising source itself, can be gathered through optical to X-ray spectroscopy. While several public time equilibrium photoionisation codes are readily available and can be used to infer average gas properties at equilibrium, time-evolving photoionisation models have only very recently started to become available. They are needed when the ionising source varies faster than the typical gas equilibration timescale. Indeed, using equilibrium models to analyse spectra of non-equilibrium gas may lead to inaccurate results and prevents a solid assessment of the gas density, physics and geometry. We present our novel Time-Evolving PhotoIonisation Device (TEPID), which self-consistently solves time…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
