A quantitative explanation of the cyclotron-line variation in accreting magnetic neutron stars of super-critical luminosity
Nick Loudas, Nikolaos D. Kylafis, Joachim E. Tr\"umper

TL;DR
This paper develops an analytical model incorporating relativistic and gravitational effects to explain the observed weak anti-correlation between cyclotron-line energy and luminosity in high-luminosity neutron stars, aligning theory with observations.
Contribution
The study introduces a purely analytical model that accounts for relativistic boosting and gravitational redshift, improving the understanding of cyclotron-line formation in super-critical accreting neutron stars.
Findings
Relativistic effects weaken the predicted $E_{CRSF}-L_X$ anti-correlation.
The model fits the V0332+53 data well, reducing the discrepancy between theory and observations.
The actual magnetic field may be about twice the value inferred from CRSF observations.
Abstract
Magnetic neutron stars (NSs) often exhibit a cyclotron resonant scattering feature (CRSF) in their X-ray spectra. Cyclotron lines are believed to form in the radiative shock in the accretion column. High-luminosity NSs show a smooth anti-correlation between the cyclotron-line centroid () and X-ray luminosity (). The observed smooth anti-correlation has been in tension with the theoretically predicted one by the radiative shock model. Since there is no other candidate site for the cyclotron-line formation, we re-examine the predicted rate of change of the cyclotron-line energy with luminosity at the radiative shock, taking a closer look at the Physics involved. We developed a purely analytical model describing the overall dependence of the observed cyclotron energy centroid on the shock front's height, including the relativistic boosting effect due to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
