Journal article

High-resolution X-Ray Spectroscopy of Interstellar Iron toward Cygnus X-1 and GX 339-4


Authors listCorrales, Lia; Gotthelf, Eric V.; Gatuzz, Efrain; Kallman, Timothy R.; Lee, Julia C.; Martins, Michael; Paerels, Frits; Psaradaki, Ioanna; Schippers, Stefan; Savin, Daniel Wolf

Publication year2024

JournalThe Astrophysical Journal

Volume number965

Issue number2

ISSN0004-637X

eISSN1538-4357

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad2939

PublisherAmerican Astronomical Society


Abstract
We present a high-resolution spectral study of Fe L-shell extinction by the diffuse interstellar medium (ISM) in the direction of the X-ray binaries Cygnus X-1 and GX 339-4, using the XMM-Newton reflection grating spectrometer. The majority of interstellar Fe is suspected to condense into dust grains in the diffuse ISM, but the compounds formed from this process are unknown. Here, we use the laboratory cross sections from Kortright & Kim (2000) and Lee et al. (2005) to model the absorption and scattering profiles of metallic Fe, and the crystalline compounds fayalite (Fe2SiO4), ferrous sulfate (FeSO4), hematite (alpha-Fe2O3), and lepidocrocite (gamma-FeOOH), which have oxidation states ranging from Fe0 to Fe3+. We find that the observed Fe L-shell features are systematically offset in energy from the laboratory measurements. An examination of over two dozen published measurements of Fe L-shell absorption finds a 1-2 eV scatter in energy positions of the L-shell features. Motivated by this, we fit for the best energy-scale shift simultaneously with the fine structure of the Fe L-shell extinction cross sections. Hematite and lepidocrocite provide the best fits (approximate to + 1.1 eV shift), followed by fayalite (approximate to + 1.8 eV shift). However, fayalite is disfavored, based on the implied abundances and knowledge of ISM silicates gained by infrared astronomical observations and meteoritic studies. We conclude that iron oxides in the Fe3+ oxidation state are good candidates for Fe-bearing dust. To verify this, new absolute photoabsorption measurements are needed on an energy scale accurate to better than 0.2 eV.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleCorrales, L., Gotthelf, E., Gatuzz, E., Kallman, T., Lee, J., Martins, M., et al. (2024) High-resolution X-Ray Spectroscopy of Interstellar Iron toward Cygnus X-1 and GX 339-4, The Astrophysical Journal, 965(2), Article 172. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad2939

APA Citation styleCorrales, L., Gotthelf, E., Gatuzz, E., Kallman, T., Lee, J., Martins, M., Paerels, F., Psaradaki, I., Schippers, S., & Savin, D. (2024). High-resolution X-Ray Spectroscopy of Interstellar Iron toward Cygnus X-1 and GX 339-4. The Astrophysical Journal. 965(2), Article 172. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ad2939



Keywords


BLACK-HOLEENERGY-LOSS SPECTROSCOPYINTERPLANETARY DUSTL-EDGE SINGLELINE-OF-SIGHTMULTIPLE PHOTOIONIZATIONOXYGEN K ABSORPTIONSUPERNOVA-REMNANTSTRANSITION-METAL OXIDESXMM-NEWTON OBSERVATION

Last updated on 2025-16-06 at 11:27