Evolution of the spin parameter of accreting compact objects with non-Kerr quadrupole moment
Cosimo Bambi

TL;DR
This paper investigates how accretion affects the spin evolution of compact objects with non-Kerr quadrupole moments, exploring the possibility of super-spinning objects exceeding the Kerr bound, which could challenge standard black hole models.
Contribution
It introduces a study of spin evolution for non-Kerr compact objects, deriving their equilibrium spin values and implications for future gravitational wave observations.
Findings
Equilibrium spin values depend on the quadrupole moment.
Objects with non-Kerr quadrupole moments can reach spin parameters greater than 1.
Future detectors like LISA can test these predictions.
Abstract
There is robust observational evidence supporting the existence of compact bodies in X-ray binary systems and of bodies at the center of many galaxies. All these objects are commonly interpreted as black holes, even is there is no direct evidence that they have an event horizon. A fundamental limit for a black hole in 4-dimensional general relativity is the Kerr bound , where is the spin parameter. This is just the condition for the existence of the event horizon. The accretion process can spin a black hole up to and some super-massive objects in galactic nuclei could be rapidly rotating black holes with spin parameter close to this limit. However, if these super-massive objects are not black holes, the Kerr bound does not hold and the accretion process can spin them up to . In this paper, I…
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