Light echos and coherent autocorrelations in a black hole spacetime
Paul M. Chesler, Lindy Blackburn, Sheperd S. Doeleman, Michael D., Johnson, James M. Moran, Ramesh Narayan, Maciek Wielgus

TL;DR
This paper investigates how light echos caused by black hole photon orbits influence the coherence of electric fields, revealing that these effects encode black hole properties but are currently undetectable.
Contribution
It introduces a simplified model analyzing scalar field autocorrelations near a Schwarzschild black hole, highlighting the suppression of echo signals in realistic observations.
Findings
Correlation peaks at multiples of photon orbit period
Power spectral density diminishes with black hole mass and wavelength
Detection of multi-path echoes is infeasible with current technology
Abstract
The Event Horizon Telescope recently produced the first images of a black hole. These images were synthesized by measuring the coherent correlation function of the complex electric field measured at telescopes located across the Earth. This correlation function corresponds to the Fourier transform of the image under the assumption that the source emits spatially incoherent radiation. However, black holes differ from standard astrophysical objects: in the absence of absorption and scattering, an observer sees a series of increasingly demagnified echos of each emitting location. These echos correspond to rays that orbit the black hole one or more times before reaching the observer. This multi-path propagation introduces spatial and temporal correlations into the electric field that encode properties of the black hole, irrespective of intrinsic variability. We explore the coherent temporal…
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