Shadows around the q-metric
J. A. Arrieta-Villamizar, J. M. Vel\'asquez-Cadavid, O. M. Pimentel,, F. D. Lora-Clavijo, A. C. Guti\'errez-Pi\~neres

TL;DR
This paper investigates the shadow and lensing effects of a q-metric spacetime, revealing how quadrupole deformation influences observable features and introduces potential repulsive gravitational effects near compact objects.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of shadows and lensing in the q-metric, highlighting the impact of quadrupole moments and identifying conditions for repulsive effects.
Findings
Shadow shape similar to Schwarzschild for small q
Einstein ring size decreases as q decreases
Repulsive effects emerge for q ≤ -0.5 near the object
Abstract
One crucial problem in relativistic astrophysics is that of the nature of black hole candidates. It is usually assumed that astrophysical black holes are described by the Schwarzschild or Kerr space-times; however, there is no direct evidence to assert this. Moreover, there are various solutions in general relativity that can be alternatives to black holes, usually called black hole mimickers. In this work, we study the shadow produced by a compact object described by the q-metric, which is the simplest static and axially symmetric solution of Einstein equations with a non-vanishing quadrupole moment. This particular spacetime has the property of containing an independent parameter , which is related to the compact object deformation. The solution corresponds to naked singularities for some specific values of this parameter. Additionally, we analyze the eigenvalues of the Riemann…
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