Prospects for Future Experimental Tests of Gravity with Black Hole Imaging: Spherical Symmetry
Prashant Kocherlakota, Luciano Rezzolla, Rittick Roy, and Maciek, Wielgus

TL;DR
Upcoming black hole imaging improvements could enable precise tests of general relativity by analyzing photon ring properties, delays, and instabilities, revealing deviations from the Kerr metric.
Contribution
This work identifies novel observables in black hole images, such as the lensing Lyapunov exponent and image width, that can test deviations from GR beyond shadow size measurements.
Findings
Photon ring delay times can estimate shadow size independently.
Lensing Lyapunov exponent is sensitive to spacetime curvature.
Image width can discriminate different spacetime geometries.
Abstract
Astrophysical black holes (BHs) are universally expected to be described by the Kerr metric, a stationary, vacuum solution of general relativity (GR). Indeed, by imaging M87 and Sgr A and measuring the size of their shadows, we have substantiated this hypothesis through successful null tests. Here we discuss the potential of upcoming improved imaging observations in constraining deviations of the spacetime geometry from that of a Schwarzschild BH (the nonspinning, vacuum GR solution), with a focus on the photon ring. The photon ring comprises a series of time-delayed, self-similarly nested higher-order images of the accretion flow, and is located close to the boundary of the shadow. In spherical spacetimes, these images are indexed by the number of half-loops executed around the BH by the photons that arrive in them. The delay time offers an independent shadow size…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Heat Transfer Mechanisms
