Surface temperature of an accretion disk around a wormhole Kerr-mimicker
A. Karakonstantakis, W. Klu\'zniak

TL;DR
This study compares the orbital and accretion disk properties of Kerr black holes and Kerr-like wormholes, finding that while many orbital features are similar, the disk temperature and inner radius differ, providing potential observational signatures.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative analysis of how accretion disk temperature and orbital properties differ between Kerr black holes and wormholes, highlighting observable distinctions.
Findings
Orbital properties are identical for both objects outside the throat.
No orbits exist within the wormhole's throat radius.
Accretion disk temperature is suppressed in wormholes with wide throats.
Abstract
It has been suggested that spinning wormholes may mimic Kerr black holes in astronomical sources such as X-ray binaries and supermassive compact objects in centers of galaxies. With recent advances in instrumentation this could be tested if clear differences between wormhole and black hole accretion were identified. We aim to quantitatively determine the extent to which the orbital properties of test particles in the gravity of a spinning wormhole may differ from those of a Kerr black hole. We seek to find an observable related to disk accretion that would be clearly different for Kerr black holes and Kerr-like wormholes. We use the standard Lagrangian approach to derive the orbital properties of test particles from an effective potential. We use standard thin disk theory to infer the disk surface temperature. We find that at a given circumferential radius the physical quantities…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
