Probing nonlinear electrodynamics in slowly rotating spacetimes through neutrino astrophysics
Herman J. Mosquera Cuesta, Gaetano Lambiase, Jonas P. Pereira

TL;DR
This paper investigates how nonlinear electrodynamics affects the spacetime around slowly rotating black holes and explores the implications for neutrino behavior and supernova explosions, offering potential observational tests.
Contribution
It provides the first analysis of neutrino oscillations and spin-flip phenomena in the spacetime of a slowly rotating nonlinear charged black hole, comparing it with the Kerr-Newman solution.
Findings
Neutrino oscillation patterns are significantly altered in nonlinear electrodynamics spacetimes.
Nonlinear electrodynamics can lead to enhanced or reduced electron fractions in supernovae.
Potential observational signatures include changes in supernova brightness and light polarization measurements.
Abstract
Huge electromagnetic fields are known to be present during the late stages of the dynamics of supernovae. Thus, when dealing with electrodynamics in this context, the possibility may arise to probe nonlinear theories (generalizations of the Maxwellian electromagnetism). We firstly solve Einstein field equations minimally coupled to an arbitrary (current-free) nonlinear Lagrangian of electrodynamics (NLED) in the slow rotation regime (black hole's mass), up to first order in . We then make use of the robust and self-contained Born-Infeld Lagrangian in order to compare and contrast the physical properties of such NLED spacetime with its Maxwellian counterpart (a slowly rotating Kerr-Newman spacetime), especially focusing on the astrophysics of both neutrino flavor oscillations () and spin-flip (, "" stands for…
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