Linking interior curvature to observable shadows: A case study of nonsingular black holes
Ming-Xin Li, Jin Pu, Yi Ling, Guo-Ping Li

TL;DR
This study links the interior curvature of nonsingular black holes with Minkowski cores to their observable shadows, showing how internal geometric differences influence shadow size and brightness, aiding tests of quantum gravity models.
Contribution
It classifies nonsingular black holes into three types based on curvature behavior and connects these types to observable shadow features, providing a new method to probe internal spacetime geometry.
Findings
Type III black holes produce the smallest, brightest shadows.
Shadow properties vary systematically with internal curvature classification.
Curvature-based classification correlates with observable shadow differences.
Abstract
We establish a direct connection between the interior curvature structure of nonsingular black holes (BHs) with a Minkowski core and their observable optical signatures. By classifying these spacetimes into three fundamental types, Type I (Kretschmann scalar K_max increasing with mass M), Type II (mass-independent K_max), and Type III (K_max decreasing with M), we demonstrate how subtle variations in the core geometry imprint distinguishable features on the BH shadow. A detailed analysis of photon dynamics reveals that the parameters {\alpha} and n, which control the deviation from Schwarzschild geometry and the radial decay of the regularizing factor, respectively, systematically alter the properties of the photon sphere. These intrinsic geometric differences propagate outward: for fixed parameters, Type III BHs, with the most compact photon sphere, produce the smallest and brightest…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Quantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Black Holes and Theoretical Physics
