Black holes and global structures of spherical spacetimes in Horava-Lifshitz theory
Jared Greenwald, Jonatan Lenells, J. X. Lu, V. H. Satheeshkumar, and, Anzhong Wang

TL;DR
This paper investigates black holes in Horava-Lifshitz theory, revealing that their horizons depend on test particle energy and differ significantly from general relativity, especially in global structure and causal properties.
Contribution
It provides a systematic analysis of black holes in HL theory, highlighting differences in horizons, causal structures, and global properties compared to GR, including the absence of Penrose diagrams.
Findings
Horizon radii depend on test particle energy.
Some solutions form Einstein-Rosen bridges with finite throats.
Slowly rotating solutions generalize Kerr with arbitrary functions.
Abstract
We systematically study black holes in the Horava-Lifshitz (HL) theory by following the kinematic approach, in which a horizon is defined as the surface at which massless test particles are infinitely redshifted. Because of the nonrelativistic dispersion relations, the speed of light is unlimited, and test particles do not follow geodesics. As a result, there are significant differences in causal structures and black holes between general relativity (GR) and the HL theory. In particular, the horizon radii generically depend on the energies of test particles. Applying them to the spherical static vacuum solutions found recently in the nonrelativistic general covariant theory of gravity, we find that, for test particles with sufficiently high energy, the radius of the horizon can be made as small as desired, although the singularities can be seen in principle only by observers with…
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