Nonlinear electrodynamics effects on the black hole shadow, deflection angle, quasinormal modes and greybody factors
Mert Okyay, Ali \"Ovg\"un

TL;DR
This paper investigates how nonlinear electrodynamics influences black hole properties, including thermodynamics, shadow, quasinormal modes, and observational signatures, revealing charge effects on stability, deflection, and gravitational wave signals.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of NED black holes, highlighting the impact of magnetic charge on observable features and offering constraints based on astrophysical data.
Findings
Black holes become colder with increasing charge.
Black holes are thermally stable, enhanced by GUP.
Magnetic charge significantly affects shadow radius.
Abstract
In this paper, we discuss the effects of nonlinear electrodynamics (NED) on non-rotating black holes, parametrized by the field coupling parameter and magnetic charge parameter in detail. Particularly, we survey physical properties of the magnetically charged black hole, thermodynamic properties, observational appearance, quasinormal modes and absorption cross sections. We then show that the black hole gets colder with increasing charge. Investigating the heat capacity, we see that the black hole is thermally stable, which is amplified by introduction of a generalized uncertainty principle (GUP) with a quantum gravity parameter . Then we compute the deflection angle at the weak field limit, by the Gauss-Bonnet theorem and the geodesic equation, showing that the magnetic charge has a contribution at the first order. By ray-tracing we simulate the observational…
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