Non-Metric Gravity II: Spherically Symmetric Solution, Missing Mass and Redshifts of Quasars
Kirill Krasnov, Yuri Shtanov

TL;DR
This paper explores a non-metric gravity theory's spherically symmetric solutions, revealing modifications to black hole structures, potential explanations for galactic missing mass, Pioneer anomaly, and quasar redshifts, differing from general relativity.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spherically symmetric vacuum solution in non-metric gravity, showing how it alters black hole interiors and astrophysical phenomena.
Findings
Black hole solutions with singular surfaces replacing traditional singularities.
Potential explanation for galaxy rotation curves without dark matter.
Modified redshift effects that could explain quasar high redshifts.
Abstract
We continue the study of the non-metric theory of gravity introduced in hep-th/0611182 and gr-qc/0703002 and obtain its general spherically symmetric vacuum solution. It respects the analog of the Birkhoff theorem, i.e., the vacuum spherically symmetric solution is necessarily static. As in general relativity, the spherically symmetric solution is seen to describe a black hole. The exterior geometry is essentially the same as in the Schwarzschild case, with power-law corrections to the Newtonian potential. The behavior inside the black-hole region is different from the Schwarzschild case in that the usual spacetime singularity gets replaced by a singular surface of a new type, where all basic fields of the theory remain finite but metric ceases to exist. The theory does not admit arbitrarily small black holes: for small objects, the curvature on the would-be horizon is so strong that…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
