A Metric for Rapidly Spinning Black Holes Suitable for Strong-Field Tests of the No-Hair Theorem
Tim Johannsen, Dimitrios Psaltis (Arizona)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new Kerr-like metric that remains regular outside the event horizon, enabling strong-field tests of the no-hair theorem for rapidly spinning black holes using electromagnetic observations.
Contribution
It constructs a regular, Kerr-like metric with free parameters, suitable for analyzing deviations in strong gravitational fields around spinning black holes.
Findings
The metric remains regular outside the event horizon.
Significant orbit changes occur with moderate deviations from Kerr.
Suitable for electromagnetic tests of the no-hair theorem.
Abstract
According to the no-hair theorem, astrophysical black holes are uniquely characterized by their masses and spins and are described by the Kerr metric. Several parametric deviations from the Kerr metric have been suggested to study observational signatures in both the electromagnetic and gravitational-wave spectra that differ from the expected Kerr signals. Due to the no-hair theorem, however, such spacetimes cannot be regular everywhere outside the event horizons, if they are solutions to the Einstein field equations; they are often characterized by naked singularities or closed time-like loops in the regions of the spacetime that are accessible to an external observer. For observational tests of the no-hair theorem that involve phenomena in the vicinity of the circular photon orbit or the innermost stable circular orbit around a black hole, these pathologies limit the applicability of…
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