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A&A 400, 437-449 (2003)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20030063
Evolution of the X-ray spectrum in the flare model of Active Galactic Nuclei
S. Collin1, S. Coupé1, A.-M. Dumont1, P.-O. Petrucci2 and A. Rózanska31 LUTH, Observatoire de Paris, Section de Meudon, 92195 Meudon, France
2 Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Grenoble, 414 rue de la Piscine, 38041 Grenoble Cedex 9, France
3 N. Copernicus Astronomical Centre, Bartycka 18, 00-716 Warsaw, Poland
(Received 19 September 2002 / Accepted 19 December 2002 )
Abstract
Nayakshin & Kazanas (2002) have considered the
time-dependent
illumination of an accretion disc
in Active Galactic Nuclei, in the lamppost model, where it is assumed
that
an X-ray source illuminates the whole inner-disc region in
a relatively steady way. We extend their study to the flare model,
which
postulates the release of a large X-ray flux above a small region
of the accretion disc. A fundamental difference to the lamppost
model is
that the region of the disc below the flare is
not illuminated before the onset of the flare.
After the onset, the temperature and the ionization state of
the irradiated skin respond immediately to
the increase of the continuum, but
pressure
equilibrium is achieved later. A few typical test models show that the reflected
spectrum that follows immediately the increase in continuum flux should always
display
the characteristics of a highly illuminated but dense
gas, i.e. very
intense X-ray emission lines and ionization edges in the soft X-ray
range. The behaviour of the iron line is however different in
the case of a "moderate" and a "strong" flare: for a moderate
flare, the spectrum displays a neutral
component of the
Fe K
line at 6.4 keV, gradually leading to more highly ionized
lines. For a strong flare, the lines are already emitted by
FeXXV (around 6.7 keV) after the onset, and are very
intense, with an equivalent width of several hundreds eV. A strong flare is
also characterized by a steep soft X-ray spectrum. The variation timescale
in the flare model is likely smaller than in the lamppost model, due
to the smaller dimension of the emission region, so the timescale for pressure equilibrium
is long compared
to the duration of a flare. It is therefore highly probable that several flares contribute at the
same time
to the luminosity. We find that the observed
correlations between
R,
, and the X-ray flux are well
accounted for by a combination of flares having not achieved pressure
equilibrium, also strongly suggesting that the observed spectrum is always dominated
by regions in non-pressure equilibrium, typical of the onset
of the flares.
Finally, a flare being confined to a small region of the disc,
the spectral lines should be narrow (except for a weak Compton broadening) and Doppler shifted,
as stressed
by Nayakshin & Kazanas (2001). All these features
should constitute
specific variable signatures of the flare model, distinguishing it
from the
lamppost model. It is however difficult, on the basis of the present
observations and models, to conclude in favor of one of the
hypothese.
Key words: accretion, accretion discs -- galaxies: active -- galaxies: nuclei
Offprint request: S. Collin, suzy.collin@obspm.fr
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2003
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