Higher-Dimensional MOG dark compact object: shadow behavior in the light of EHT observations
Kourosh Nozari, Sara Saghafi, Ali Mohammadpour

TL;DR
This study derives a higher-dimensional MOG dark compact object metric, analyzes its shadow behavior, and compares it with EHT observations of M87 to constrain model parameters, revealing effects of extra dimensions and STVG parameters on shadow size.
Contribution
It introduces a higher-dimensional MOG dark compact object model and examines its shadow, linking theoretical predictions with EHT observational constraints.
Findings
Extra dimensions reduce the shadow size of the MOG dark compact object.
The parameter alpha has a suppressible effect on shadow size.
The four-dimensional MOG shadow size aligns with EHT data constraints.
Abstract
Consideration of extra spatial dimensions is motivated by the unification of gravity with other interactions, the achievement of the ultimate framework of quantum gravity, and fundamental problems in particle physics and cosmology. Much attention has been focused on the effect of these extra dimensions on the modified theories of gravity. Analytically examining astrophysical phenomena like black hole shadows is one approach to understand how extra dimensions would affect the modified gravitational theories. The purpose of this study is to derive a higher dimensional metric for a dark compact object in STVG theory and then examine the behavior of the shadow shapes for this solution in STVG theory in higher dimensions. We apply the Carter method to formulate the geodesic equations and the Hamilton Jacobi method to find photon orbits around this higher dimensional MOG dark compact object.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Optical Sensing Technologies · Random lasers and scattering media · Optical Polarization and Ellipsometry
