Gravitational lensing in a warm plasma
Barbora Bezd\v{e}kov\'a, Volker Perlick

TL;DR
This paper investigates how a warm, non-magnetized plasma affects gravitational lensing near compact objects, providing analytical insights into light bending and shadow formation in such dispersive media.
Contribution
It introduces a linearized model for warm plasma influence on light rays in general-relativistic spacetimes, extending previous cold plasma analyses to more realistic high-temperature conditions.
Findings
Calculated the influence of warm plasma on light bending angles.
Derived shadow sizes in warm plasma environments.
Analyzed effects in Schwarzschild and Kerr spacetimes.
Abstract
Analytical studies of light bending in a dispersive medium near compact objects, e.g., black holes or neutron stars, are most challenged by a suitable definition of the medium. The most realistic model would be a hot magnetized plasma. In such a medium, however, an analytical description of light rays is very difficult. Therefore, usually an isotropic dispersive medium is assumed in analytical calculations. While it is possible to formulate equations for a general refractive index, which some studies do, most attention in the literature is given to the particular case of a cold, non-magnetized electron-ion plasma. Whereas this model covers many astrophysically relevant situations, there are indications that in some cases the plasma temperature is so high that the approximation of a cold plasma is no longer valid. For this reason, we consider in this paper a warm, non-magnetized…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Dust and Plasma Wave Phenomena
