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The galactic black hole candidate Cygnus X-1, one of the brightest sources in the sky, is the first ever black hole candidate to be discovered. Despite being a very well-studied object due to its persistent brightness in X-rays, there has been much difficulty in determining its mass since its discovery. In spite of continuous efforts since the early nineteen seventies, there is yet no concensus on its mass for nearly four decades. The uncertainties in the mass measurements are due to the high degree of error involved in the measurement of its distance. In 2011, Orosz et al. constrained the mass of this object to be M = 14.8 +/- 1.0 M_Sun using dynamical methods. In this paper, we obtained the mass of Cygnus X-1, using a completely independent method, namely, carrying out the spectral analysis using Two Component Advective Flow (TCAF) solution based fits file and the archival data of RXTE PCA instrument. Our result does not require the distance of the source or the information about the companion. Each spectral fit with the TCAF gives one best fitted mass. Averaging fitted masses of Cygnus X-1 over a span of five months of observation during its persistent hard phase, mass of the source comes out to be M_avg = 14.20 +/- 0.36 M_Sun, which is consistent with the dynamically estimated mass.
Rapid spectral changes in the hard X-ray on a time scale down to ~0.1 s are studied by applying shot analysis technique to the Suzaku observations of the black hole binary Cygnus X-1, performed on 2008 April 18 during the low/hard state. We successfu
We present X-ray spectral analysis of Seyfert 1.5 Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) NGC~4151 using textit{NuSTAR} observation during 2012. This is the first attempt to fit an AGN data using the physical Two Component Advective flow (TCAF) solution. We dis
The black hole transient H1743-322 exhibited several outbursts with temporal and spectral variability since its discovery in 1977. These outbursts occur at a quasi-regular recurrence period of around $0.5-2$ years, since its rediscovery in March 2003
Thanks to recurrent observations of the black hole binary Cyg X-1 carried out over 15 years the INTEGRAL satellite has collected the largest data set in the hard X-ray band for this source. We have analyzed these data, complemented by data collected
We present the results of the analysis of the broad-band spectrum of Cygnus X-1 from 3.0 to 200 keV, using data from a 10 ksec observation by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. The spectrum can be well described phenomenologically by an exponentially c