19 research outputs found
Note on a new parametrization for testing the Kerr metric
We propose a new parametrization for testing the Kerr nature of astrophysical
black hole candidates. The common approaches focus on the attempt to constrain
possible deviations from the Kerr solution described by new terms in the
metric. Here we adopt a different perspective. The mass and the spin of a black
hole make the spacetime curved and we want to check whether they do it with the
strength predicted by general relativity. As an example, we apply our
parametrization to the black hole shadow, an observation that may be possible
in a not too distant future.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Testing Ghasemi-Nodehi-Bambi spacetime with continuum-fitting method
The continuum-fitting method is the analysis of the thermal spectrum of the
geometrically thin and optically thick accretion disk around stellar-mass black
holes. A parametrization aiming to test the Kerr nature of astrophysical black
holes was proposed in Ghasemi-Nodehi and Bambi in EPJC 76: 290, 2016. The
metric contains 11 parameters in addition to the mass and spin parameters. One
can recover the Kerr case by setting all parameters to one. In this paper, I
study the continuum-fitting method in Ghasemi-Nodehi-Bambi background. I show
the impact of each of the parameters on the spectra. I then employ \c{hi}2
studies and show that using the continuum-fitting method all parameters of
Ghasemi-Nodehi- Bambi spacetime are degenerate. However, the parameter b9 can
be constrained in the case of a high spin value and the Ghasemi-Nodehi-Bambi
black hole as reference. This degeneracy means that the spectra of the Kerr
case cannot be distinguished from spectra produced in Ghasemi-Nodehi-Bmabi
spacetime. This is a problem as regards measuring the spin of astrophysical
black holes and constrain possible deviations from the Kerr case of General
Relativity.Comment: Publishe
Shadows of CPR black holes and tests of the Kerr metric
We study the shadow of the Cardoso-Pani-Rico (CPR) black hole for different
values of the black hole spin , the deformation parameters
and , and the viewing angle . We find that the main impact of
the deformation parameter is the change of the size of the
shadow, while the deformation parameter affects the shape of its
boundary. In general, it is impossible to test the Kerr metric, because the
shadow of a Kerr black hole can be reproduced quite well by a black hole with
non-vanishing or . Deviations from the Kerr
geometry could be constrained in the presence of high quality data and in the
favorable case of a black hole with high values of and . However, the
shadows of some black holes with non-vanishing present peculiar
features and the possible detection of these shadows could unambiguously
distinguish these objects from the standard Kerr black holes of general
relativity.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures. v2: refereed version with minor change
The Spin of the Supermassive Black Hole in MCG-05-23-16
We present the results of a multi-epoch and multi-instrument study of the
supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy MCG-05-23-16 aiming at the
determination of its spin. We have analyzed high quality X-ray data of
MCG-05-23-16 from XMM-Newton, Suzaku, and NuSTAR obtained over a period of
about 10~years. We have built a double-reflection spectral model that well
describes the observed spectrum based on prior results suggesting that the iron
K line includes both a broad component from the disk's reflection
spectrum and a narrow component due to fluorescence and scattering off material
by more distant matter. Our measurement of the black hole spin parameter is
(99\% confidence level)
Iron line reverberation mapping in Ghasemi-Nodehi–Bambi background
The reverberation associated with the iron line is the time lag between direct photons from the corona and the photons reflected from the disk. The resulting line spectrum is called the 2D transfer function. The shape of the 2D transfer function is determined by the geometry of spacetime and the properties of BH. In a paper (Ghasemi-Nodehi and Bambi in EPJC 76:290, 2016), the authors have proposed a parametrization. This parametrization is aimed to test the Kerr nature of astrophysical black hole candidates. In this paper, I provide a reverberation mapping of the Ghasemi-Nodehi–Bambi metric in order to constrain the parameter of spacetime. All parameters can be constrained with the exception of . The parameter is harder to constrain too
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Testing Ghasemi-Nodehi–Bambi metric parameters with quasi-periodic oscillations
QPOs are seen as peak features in the X-ray power spectral density of stellar mass black holes and neutron stars, of which frequencies can be measured with high precision. These QPO frequencies are believed to be related to fundamental frequencies of test particles, which are mainly determined by the background metric. We consider the metric introduced in Ghasemi-Nodehi and Bambi (Eur Phys J C 76:290, 2016). The fundamental frequencies in this metric are sensitive to some of the metric parameters but insensitive to other parameters, which means, the differences in fundamental frequencies in this metric and those in the Kerr ones can be significant for small changes of some but not all parameters around the Kerr value. By comparing with the QPO observations of GRO J1655-40, we find that only one parameter of the Ghasemi-Nodehi–Bambi metric can be strongly constrained, but other parameters cannot. We also use nested algorithm to investigate whether better constraints on the Ghasemi-Nodehi–Bambi metric parameters can be obtained from QPO observations of multiple objects by simulations. We find that four parameters can be strongly constrained while other parameters cannot . Our results suggest that QPOs may be important tools for testing the Kerr metric