Power-law X-ray and gamma-ray emission from relativistic thermal plasmas
Abstract
A common characteristic of cosmic sources is power-law X-ray emission. Extragalactic sources of this type include compact components of active galactic nuclei (AGN). The present study is concerned with a theoretical model of such sources, taking into account the assumption that the power-law spectra are produced by repeated Compton scatterings of soft photons by relativistic thermal electrons. This is one of several possible physical mechanisms leading to the formation of a power-law spectrum. Attention is given to the Comptonization of soft photon sources, the rates of pair processes, the solution of the pair equilibrium equation, and the constraints on a soft photon source and an energy source. It is concluded that the compactness parameters L/R of most of the cosmic sources observed to date lie below the maximum luminosity curves considered.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- February 1985
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1985ApJ...289..514Z
- Keywords:
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- Cosmic Plasma;
- Emission Spectra;
- Gamma Ray Spectra;
- Pair Production;
- Relativistic Plasmas;
- Thermal Plasmas;
- X Ray Sources;
- Active Galactic Nuclei;
- Compton Effect;
- Equilibrium Equations;
- Photon Density;
- Plasma Equilibrium;
- Plasma Temperature;
- Synchrotron Radiation;
- Astrophysics