139 research outputs found
Shadows near supermassive black holes: from a theoretical concept to GR test
General relativity (GR) passed many astronomical tests but in majority of
them GR predictions have been tested in a weak gravitational field
approximation. Around 50 years ago a shadow has been introduced by J. Bardeen
as a purely theoretical concept but due to an enormous progress in
observational and computational facilities this theoretical prediction has been
confirmed and the most solid argument for an existence of supermassive black
holes in Sgr A* and M87* has been obtained.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figure, presented as a talk at The 6th International
Conference on Particle Physics and Astrophysics (ICPPA-2022), accepted in
IJMP
Constraints on tidal charge of the supermassive black hole at the Galactic Center with trajectories of bright stars
As it was pointed out recently in Hees et al. (2017), observations of stars
near the Galactic Center with current and future facilities provide an unique
tool to test general relativity (GR) and alternative theories of gravity in a
strong gravitational field regime. In particular, the authors showed that the
Yukawa gravity could be constrained with Keck and TMT observations. Some time
ago, Dadhich et al. (2001) showed that the Reissner -- Nordstr\"om metric with
a tidal charge is naturally appeared in the framework of Randall -- Sundrum
model with an extra dimension ( is called tidal charge and it could be
negative in such an approach). Astrophysical consequences of of presence of
black holes with a tidal charge are considerered, in particular, geodesics and
shadows in Kerr -- Newman braneworld metric are analyzed in (Schee and
Stuchlik, 2009a), while profiles of emission lines generated by rings orbiting
braneworld Kerr black hole are considered in (Schee and Stuchlik, 2009b).
Possible observational signatures of gravitational lensing in a presence of the
Reissner -- Nordstr\"om black hole with a tidal charge at the Galactic Center
are discussed in papers by Bin-Nun (2010a, 2010b, 2011). Here we are following
such an approach and we obtain analytical expressions for orbital precession
for Reissner -- Nordstrom -- de-Sitter solution in post-Newtonian approximation
and discuss opportunities to constrain parameters of the metric from
observations of bright stars with current and future astrometric observational
facilities such as VLT, Keck, GRAVITY, E-ELT and TMT.Comment: 9 pages, references were added, minor typos were correcte
Shadows around Sgr A* and M87* as a tool to test gravity theories
In the framework of Randall -- Sundrum theory with extra dimension Reissner
-- Nordstr\"om black hole solutions with a tidal charge have been found. The
shadow around the supermassive black hole in M87 was reconstructed in 2019
based on observations with the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) in April 2017. In
May 2022 the EHT Collaboration presented results of a shadow reconstruction for
our Galactic Center. Earlier, for Reissner -- Nordstr\"om metric we derived
analytical expressions for shadow size as a function of charge and later
generalized these results for a tidal charge case. We discuss opportunities to
evaluate parameters of alternative theories of gravity with shadow size
estimates done by the EHT Collaboration, in particular, a tidal charge could be
estimated from these observations.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, presented at the ICRANet-ISFAHAN Astronomy
Meeting, accepted in Astronomical and Astrophysical Transactions; typos were
correcte
Contribution of microlensing to X-ray variability of distant QSOs
We consider a contribution of microlensing to the X-ray variability of
high-redshifted QSOs. Cosmologically distributed gravitational microlenses
could be localized in galaxies (or even in bulge or halo of gravitational
macrolenses) or could be distributed in a uniform way. We have analyzed both
cases of such distributions. We found that the optical depth for gravitational
microlensing caused by cosmologically distributed deflectors could be
significant and could reach at . This means that
cosmologically distributed deflectors may contribute significantlly to the
X-ray variability of high-redshifted QSOs (). Considering that the upper
limit of the optical depth () corresponds to the case where dark
matter forms cosmologically distributed deflectors, observations of the X-ray
variations of unlensed QSOs can be used for the estimation of the dark matter
fraction of microlenses.Comment: 6 pages, to appear in "Impact of Gravitational Lensing on Cosmology",
IAU Symposium 225, eds. Y. Mellier & G. Meyla
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