Sagittarius A* near-infrared flares polarization as a probe of space-time I: Non-rotating exotic compact objects
Nicolas Aimar, Jo\~ao Lu\'is Rosa, Hanna Liis Tamm, Paulo Garcia

TL;DR
This study explores the potential to detect non-rotating exotic compact objects near Sagittarius A* through polarized flare observations, assessing the capabilities of current and future instruments like GRAVITY and GRAVITY+.
Contribution
It evaluates the detectability of various exotic compact object models using simulated data and compares the effectiveness of current and future observational uncertainties.
Findings
Current GRAVITY uncertainties do not allow detection of exotic models.
Future GRAVITY+ sensitivity can potentially identify some exotic compact objects.
Increasing model complexity reduces the likelihood of detection.
Abstract
The center of our galaxy hosts Sagittarius~A*, a supermassive compact object of solar masses, usually associated with a black hole. Nevertheless, black holes possess a central singularity, considered unphysical, and an event horizon, which leads to loss of unitarity in a quantum description of the system. To address these theoretical inconsistencies, alternative models, collectively known as exotic compact objects, have been proposed. In this paper, we investigate the potential detectability of signatures associated with non-rotating exotic compact objects within the Sgr~A* polarized flares dataset, as observed through GRAVITY and future instruments. We examine a total of eight distinct metrics, originating from four different categories of static and spherically symmetric compact objects: Black Holes, Boson stars, Fluid spheres, and Gravastars. Our approach…
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