Confined-exotic-matter wormholes with no gluing effects -- Imaging supermassive wormholes and black holes
Mustapha Azreg-A\"inou

TL;DR
This paper classifies and constructs various types of wormholes, focusing on type I supermassive wormholes that mimic black hole shadows, and introduces a novel method for their derivation without gluing effects.
Contribution
It presents a new classification of wormholes based on stress-energy behavior and introduces a general method for constructing them without cutoffs or gluing, focusing on type I supermassive wormholes.
Findings
Type I wormholes can mimic black hole shadows.
Radial pressure is negative only near the throat.
Supermassive wormholes have a specific inverse square law for layer size.
Abstract
We classify wormholes endowed with redshift effects and finite mass into three types. Type I wormholes have their radial pressure dying out faster, as one moves away from the throat, than any other component of the stress-energy and thus violate the least the local energy conditions. In type II (resp. III) wormholes the radial and transverse pressures are asymptotically proportional and die out faster (resp. slower) than the energy density. We introduce a novel and generalizable method for deriving, with no cutoff in the stress-energy or gluing, a class of each of the three wormhole types. We focus on type I wormholes and construct different asymptotically flat solutions with finite, upper- and lower-bounded, mass . It is observed that the radial pressure is negative, and the null energy condition is violated, only inside a narrow layer, adjacent to the throat, of relative spacial…
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.
