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We perform a first study of time-dependent X-ray reflection in photo-ionized accretion disks. We assume a step-functional change in the X-ray flux and use a simplified prescription to describe the time evolution of the illuminated gas density profile in response to changes in the flux. We find that the dynamical time for re-adjustment of the hydrostatic balance is an important relaxation time scale of the problem since it affects evolution of the ionization state of the reflector. Because of this the Fe K-alpha line emissivity depends on the shape and intensity of the illuminating flux in prior times, and hence it is not a function of the instantaneous illuminating spectrum. Moreover, during the transition, a prominent Helium-like component of the Fe K-alpha line may appear. As a result, the line flux may appear to be completely uncorrelated with X-ray continuum flux on time scales shorter than the dynamical time. In addition, the time-dependence of the illuminating flux may leave imprints even on the time-averaged line spectra, which may be used as an additional test of accretion disk geometry. Our findings appear to be important for the proposed Fe K-alpha line reverberation studies in lamppost-like geometries for accretion rates exceeding about $sim 1%$ of the Eddington value. However, most AGN do not show Helium-like lines that are prominent in such models, probably indicating that these models are not applicable to real sources.
One of the principal scientific objectives of the upcoming Constellation-X mission is to attempt to map the inner regions of accretion disks around black holes in Seyfert galaxies by reverberation mapping of the Fe K fluorescence line. This area of t
Short X-ray reverberation lags are seen across a broad Fe-K energy band in more than twenty active galactic nuclei (AGNs). This broad iron line feature in the lag spectrum is most significant in super-Eddington sources such as Ark 564 ($L/L_{rm Edd}s
The relativistically broad X-ray iron line seen in many AGN spectra is thought to originate from the central regions of the putative black hole accretion disk. Both the line profile and strength will vary in response to rapid variability of the prima
Observations of the fluorescent Fe K-alpha emission line from the inner accretion flows of stellar mass black holes in X-ray binaries and supermassive black holes in Active Galactic Nuclei have become an important tool to study the magnitude and incl
We have calculated the relativistic reflection component of the X-ray spectra of accretion disks in active galactic nuclei (AGN). Our calculations have shown that the spectra can be significantly modified by the motion of the accretion flow and the g