Abstract

The UV emission lines of Hercules X-1, resolved with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph and Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph, can be divided into broad (FWHM ? 750 km s-1) and narrow (FWHM ? 150 km s-1) components. The broad lines can be unambiguously identified with emission from an accretion disk which rotates prograde with the orbit. The narrow lines, previously identified with the X-ray-illuminated atmosphere of the companion star, are blueshifted at both = 0.2 and = 0.8, and the line flux at = 0.2 is ?0.2 of the flux at = 0.8. Line ratio diagnostics show that the density of the narrow-line region is log ne = 13.4 ? 0.2, and Te = 1.0 ? 0.2 ? 105 K. The symmetry of the eclipse ingress suggests that the line emission on the surface of the disk is left-right symmetric relative to the orbit. Model fits to the O V, Si IV, and He II line profiles agree with this result, but fits to the N V lines suggest that the receding side of the disk is brighter. We note that there are narrow absorption components in the N V lines with blueshifts of ?500 km s-1.

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