Multipolar boson stars: macroscopic Bose-Einstein condensates akin to hydrogen orbitals
C. A. R. Herdeiro, J. Kunz, I. Perapechka, E. Radu, Ya. Shnir

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that static boson stars can have complex multipolar structures similar to hydrogen atomic orbitals, revealing a novel analogy between gravitational solutions and quantum atomic orbitals.
Contribution
The authors explicitly construct non-linear solutions of boson stars with multipolar structures analogous to hydrogen orbitals, extending the understanding of their possible morphologies.
Findings
Boson stars can have multipolar energy density structures similar to atomic orbitals.
Solutions with non-zero magnetic quantum number m lack continuous symmetries.
Constructed hybrid orbital-like boson star solutions.
Abstract
Boson stars are often described as macroscopic Bose-Einstein condensates. By accommodating large numbers of bosons in the same quantum state, they materialize macroscopically the intangible probability density cloud of a single particle in the quantum world. We take this interpretation of boson stars one step further. We show, by explicitly constructing the fully non-linear solutions, that static (in terms of their spacetime metric, ) boson stars, composed of a single complex scalar field, , can have a non-trivial multipolar structure, yielding the same morphologies for their energy density as those that elementary hydrogen atomic orbitals have for their probability density. This provides a close analogy between the elementary solutions of the non-linear Einstein--Klein-Gordon theory, denoted , which could be realized in the macrocosmos, and those of…
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