Low charge states of Si and S: from Cygnus X-1 to the lab and back
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2013
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This work was written as part of one of the author's official duties as an Employee of the United States Government and is therefore a work of the United States Government. In accordance with 17 U.S.C. 105, no copyright protection is available for such works under U.S. Law.
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Abstract
The X-ray light curves of the high mass X-ray binary (HMXB)
Cygnus X-1 are shaped by strong, relatively short, absorption dips.
While spectra extracted from the dip free phases are dominated by
absorption lines of the Rydberg series of H- and He-like ions, 1s–2p
transitions of lower ionized Si and S appear in the dip spectra. This
shift in charge balance suggests that we probe “clumps” of cold
material embedded in the companion’s stellar wind as they cross
our line of sight. Determining the bulk motion of these clumps by
measuring the Doppler shifts of these lines as a function of dipping
strength and ionization state can confirm this theory. Unfortunately,
the predicted uncertainty for theoretical calculations – if available
at all – is of the order of the expected shifts in the system. To overcome this lack of reliable reference wavelentghs, we measured the
Kα spectra of H- through F-like Si and S with the EBIT Calorimeter
Spectrometer (ECS) and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory electron beam ion trap EBIT-I. We then directly apply these
new line centers to calculate the Doppler shifts of the lines observed
in Cygnus X-1. With this approach, we find shifts consistent with
constant velocity of the absorber throughout all ionization states
and, hence, provide evidence for an onion-like ion structure of the
clumps.