Letelier black hole immersed in an electromagnetic universe
Ahmad Al-Badawi, Faizuddin Ahmed, and \.Izzet Sakall{\i}

TL;DR
This paper explores a novel black hole solution influenced by string clouds and electromagnetic fields, analyzing its thermodynamics, particle motion, stability, optical properties, and gravitational lensing effects, revealing significant deviations from classical Schwarzschild black holes.
Contribution
It introduces a new static, spherically symmetric black hole model with string cloud and electromagnetic parameters, detailing their effects on horizon, thermodynamics, stability, and optical phenomena.
Findings
Horizon radius depends on string and electromagnetic parameters.
Thermodynamic quantities are explicit functions of additional parameters.
Black hole remains stable under scalar perturbations.
Abstract
We investigate a static, spherically symmetric black hole solution surrounded by a cloud of strings and immersed in an electromagnetic universe. By deriving the event horizon from the lapse function, we demonstrate that both the string cloud parameter and the electromagnetic background parameter significantly modify the horizon radius compared to the Schwarzschild case. Consequently, thermodynamic quantities-including the Hawking temperature, Bekenstein-Hawking entropy, and heat capacity-become explicit functions of these additional parameters, with the heat capacity exhibiting divergences that signal phase transitions. We analyze the motion of massive test particles in this spacetime, deriving the effective potential and calculating the innermost stable circular orbit radius, which governs the inner edge of accretion disks and influences orbital stability. Scalar perturbations are…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research
