Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy
Scientific paper
Apr 1994
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1994apj...425..787v&link_type=abstract
Astrophysical Journal, Part 1 (ISSN 0004-637X), vol. 425, no. 2, p. 787-796
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astronomy
27
Boundary Layers, Cataclysmic Variables, Emission Spectra, Rosat Mission, Rotating Disks, Iue, Proportional Counters, Recombination Reactions, Stellar Luminosity, Ultraviolet Astronomy, X Ray Binaries
Scientific paper
Many cataclysmic variables (CVs) and low-mass X-ray binaries show He II line emission at wavelength 1640 and wavelength 4686. As recombination lines of an ion requiring 55 eV for ionization, these lines cannot be attributed to gravitational heating in the disk but could be due to reprocessed 55-280 eV X-rays which may be produced in a boundary layer at the disk/star surface. We undertook a search for this soft component using the Positon Sensitve Proportional Counter (PSPC) on ROSAT. The photon fluxes we observe are not sufficient to produce the He II wavelength 1640 fluxes observed by IUE. If we assume that the X-ray luminosity is due to emission from a boundary layer, then the observed quiescent luminosity is one-quarter of the total accretion luminosity as determined by optical and ultraviolet observations rather than the one-half that is predicted by some theories. An additional very soft component (e.g. an approximately equal 10-20 eV blackbody) could provide sufficient photons in the 0.055-0.100 keV band to produce the observed He II fluxes and contribute the additional luminosity from the boundary layer while remaining hidden to the PSPC and IUE. Alternatively, the high He II line fluxes could be evidence for high-temperature collisionally ionized material. We also find evidence for line emission at approximately equal 0.9 keV consistent with L-shell emission from highly ionized iron.
Patterson Jaclyn
Raymond John C.
Silber Andrew
Vrtilek Saeqa D.
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